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| Year | Milestone | |------|-----------| | 1994 | Graduates from University of Washington (B.A. English/Journalism). | | 1997 | Joins Seattle Post‑Intelligencer as a staff reporter. | | 2003 | Hired by The Seattle Times (Labor beat). | | 2009 | Wins SPJ Northwest Investigative Reporting award. | | 2012 | Publishes first book, The Other Side of the Coin. | | 2015 | Publishes Unfinished Business; begins regular editorial columns. | | 2018 | Pulitizer finalist for “When the Floodwaters Rise.” | | 2020 | Co‑authors Margins of the City; serves on Women’s Voices board. | | 2022 | Launches Digital Storytelling Lab; receives Knight Innovation award. | | 2024 | Anticipated release of The Quiet Revolt. |
In 2015 Sandra unveiled what would become her hallmark: a three‑part body of work exploring black through three lenses—Material, Memory, and Movement. sandra otterson black
Critics have described Sandra’s work as “a masterclass in the eloquence of restraint.” The New York Times called her “the contemporary alchemist who turns black into gold for the soul,” while ArtForum highlighted her ability to “re‑contextualize absence as presence.” | Year | Milestone | |------|-----------| | 1994
Sandra Otterson Black is an American journalist, author, and advocate whose work has spanned investigative reporting, cultural criticism, and long‑form storytelling. Best known for her tenure at The Seattle Times and for several acclaimed books on gender, labor, and the American social fabric, Black has built a reputation for deep‑dive reporting that blends meticulous research with a human‑centered narrative style. In 2015 Sandra unveiled what would become her
| Year | Milestone | |------|-----------| | 1994 | Graduates from University of Washington (B.A. English/Journalism). | | 1997 | Joins Seattle Post‑Intelligencer as a staff reporter. | | 2003 | Hired by The Seattle Times (Labor beat). | | 2009 | Wins SPJ Northwest Investigative Reporting award. | | 2012 | Publishes first book, The Other Side of the Coin. | | 2015 | Publishes Unfinished Business; begins regular editorial columns. | | 2018 | Pulitizer finalist for “When the Floodwaters Rise.” | | 2020 | Co‑authors Margins of the City; serves on Women’s Voices board. | | 2022 | Launches Digital Storytelling Lab; receives Knight Innovation award. | | 2024 | Anticipated release of The Quiet Revolt. |
In 2015 Sandra unveiled what would become her hallmark: a three‑part body of work exploring black through three lenses—Material, Memory, and Movement.
Critics have described Sandra’s work as “a masterclass in the eloquence of restraint.” The New York Times called her “the contemporary alchemist who turns black into gold for the soul,” while ArtForum highlighted her ability to “re‑contextualize absence as presence.”
Sandra Otterson Black is an American journalist, author, and advocate whose work has spanned investigative reporting, cultural criticism, and long‑form storytelling. Best known for her tenure at The Seattle Times and for several acclaimed books on gender, labor, and the American social fabric, Black has built a reputation for deep‑dive reporting that blends meticulous research with a human‑centered narrative style.