Gary Kamiya

Job title: 
Author, Journalist and Historian of San Francisco
Bio/CV: 

Gary Kamiya was born in Oakland, grew up in Berkeley and have lived in San Francisco since 1971. He received my BA and MA in English literature from UC Berkeley, where he won the Mark Schorer Citation. Kamiya was a co-founder and longtime executive editor of the groundbreaking web site Salon.com, where he reported from the Middle East, covered three Olympics, and wrote about politics, pop culture, literature, art, music and sports. Until March 2018 he was the executive editor of San Francisco Magazine, where he wrote award-winning features about the tech-driven transformation of San Francisco, homelessness, the Tenderloin, the injection drug crisis, the waterfront, the new Museum of Modern Art, the controversy over the canonization of Father Junipero Serra, and legalized marijuana, among other subjects.

Kamiya's first book, Shadow Knight: The Secret War Against Hitler, was a critically-acclaimed narrative history of Britain's top-secret Special Operations Executive. His second book, Cool Gray City of Love: 49 Views of San Francisco, was awarded the 2013 Northern California Book Award in creative nonfiction and has sold more than 50,000 copies. Kamiya's latest book, Spirits of San Francisco: Voyages Through the Unknown City (2020), with artist Paul Madonna, had also been a long-running bestseller. His award-winning history column, "Portals of the Past," runs every other Saturday in the San Francisco Examiner. Kamiya's work has appeared in the New York Times Book Review, ArtForum, Sports Illustrated, Mother Jones, and many other publications and has been widely anthologized, including in The Best African-American Essays 2010, The New Harvard Literary History of the United States, and the Longman Reader.  He has been the recipient of numerous awards, including the Ron Ross Founder's Award by the San Francisco History Association and the Presidio Historical Association Award. Kamiya has appeared as an expert on-camera source in numerous documentaries, including Citizen Hearst, the 4-hour PBS documentary on William Randolph Hearst, Jim Yager and Peter Stein’s Moving San Francisco (about the past, present and future of transportation in San Francisco)and two of their previous documentaries, the Emmy Award-winningWater from the Wilderness (on Hetch Hetchy) and The People's Palace (on City Hall), Michael House's I Remember Herb Caen, and others. He lives on Telegraph Hill in San Francisco.