Born in San Mateo, California, Matteson is the son of Thomas D. Matteson (1920–2011), an airline executive jointly responsible for developing the theory of reliability-centered maintenance, and Rosemary H. Matteson (1920–2010), who worked as a commercial artist before becoming a homemaker.
Matteson appeared in the 2018 documentary Orchard House: Home of Little Women.[7]
Matteson is a former treasurer of the Melville Society and is a member of the Louisa May Alcott Society's advisory board. Matteson is a fellow of the Massachusetts Historical Society and has served as the deputy director of the Leon Levy Center for Biography. He married Michelle Rollo in 1991. They have a daughter. Since 2023, Matteson has divided his time between his principal home in the Bronx, New York and a secondary residence in Lyon, France.
He is not the same person as the John Matteson who, as a professor of speech at Los Angeles City College in 2008, allegedly barred a student from giving a classroom speech in opposition to same-sex marriage.[8]
^Matteson, John (2021). A Worse Place Than Hell: How the Civil War Battle of Fredericksburg Changed a Nation. National Geographic Books. ISBN978-0393247077.
^Turnquist, Jan (2018-05-20), Orchard House: Home of Little Women (Documentary, Short), Zareen Karani Araoz, Dylan Baker, Caroline Dunbar, Willa Fitzgerald, retrieved 2020-11-27