Trey Garrison
Trey Garrison's secret identity is working as a mild-mannered journalist, editor, humorist, opinionist, consultant, entrepreneur, and part-time sybarite. Maybe the best word to describe him is racontrepreneur.
Better yet, "Writer of Wrongs"
Future award-winning author of the soon-to-be published (cross your fingers) The Merchant Princes: A Far Ranger Adventure, an alternative history/steampunk/zombie/Nazi mashup adventure.
Trey's work has appeared in a number of publications, often with his consent and sometimes with his knowledge. He's a contributor for D Magazine '" considered among the best city magazines in the United States '" and for Reason magazine.Trey is a special contributor for The Dallas Morning News and a field reporter for The Land Report. He's also a regular for a host of other pubs that pay the bills while he dreams of cover bylines in Vanity Fair and The Atlantic. (He's written a couple of business books, and for the Dallas Business Journal and a slew of other publications '" all of which he'd just as soon forget, really.)
As a writer, he's a better chef. And as a chef, he's a better shooter. On the whole, he'd rather be on the beach in Jamaica. Wouldn't you?
Read More »
Better yet, "Writer of Wrongs"
Future award-winning author of the soon-to-be published (cross your fingers) The Merchant Princes: A Far Ranger Adventure, an alternative history/steampunk/zombie/Nazi mashup adventure.
Trey's work has appeared in a number of publications, often with his consent and sometimes with his knowledge. He's a contributor for D Magazine '" considered among the best city magazines in the United States '" and for Reason magazine.Trey is a special contributor for The Dallas Morning News and a field reporter for The Land Report. He's also a regular for a host of other pubs that pay the bills while he dreams of cover bylines in Vanity Fair and The Atlantic. (He's written a couple of business books, and for the Dallas Business Journal and a slew of other publications '" all of which he'd just as soon forget, really.)
As a writer, he's a better chef. And as a chef, he's a better shooter. On the whole, he'd rather be on the beach in Jamaica. Wouldn't you?
...
- Content
- 0
- Fans
- 0
- Contributor since
- 2/1/2011