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  1. Mark Stein (born 1951) is an American writer. Early life and education. Raised in Silver Spring, Maryland, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1973. Career. Stein wrote the screenplay for the Goldie Hawn and Steve Martin film Housesitter. His stage plays were first produced at New Playwrights Theater of Washington, D.C.

  2. Mark Stein's books include How the States Got Their Shapes, American Panic: A History of Who Scares Us and Why, and Vice Capades: Sex, Drugs & Bowling from the Pilgrims to the Present.

  3. The Mark Steyn Audio Show. The Eight-Hundred-Pound Megillah. Steyn fields questions on many topics, including Biden's "sudden" cognitive decline and Thursday's UK election... Continue Reading. Clubland Q&A. Live Around the Planet: Wednesday July 3rd. Mark takes questions from Steyn Club members around the world... Continue Reading.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Mark_SteynMark Steyn - Wikipedia

    Mark Steyn (/ s t aɪ n /; born December 8, 1959) is a Canadian author and a radio and television presenter. He has written several books, including The New York Times bestsellers America Alone, After America, and Broadway Babies Say Goodnight.

  5. www.marksteinauthor.com › worksMark Stein - Works

    Over the years, Mark Stein's lyrical works have appeared in Nimrod, Michigan Quarterly, Confrontation, Madison Review, Moment magazine, Exposition Review, Eclectica, Burningword Journal, and elsewhere.

  6. Mark Stein is the author of How the States Got Their Shapes, a New York Times bestseller that became the basis of the History Channel series of the same name, in which he frequently appears. He is also the author of How the States Got Their Shapes Too: The People Behind the Borderlines.

  7. Mark Stein is a German critic, writer, and academic who runs the National and Transnational Studies programme (NTS) at Münster University. He's Chair of English Studies, specialising in postcolonial and diaspora literatures and cultures, with a focus on porosity and translocation in anglophone cultural production.