Michael Ventura (born October 31, 1945) is an American novelist, screenwriter, film director, essayist and cultural critic.[1]
History
Michael Ventura commenced his career as a journalist at the Austin Sun, a counter-culture bi-weekly newspaper published in the 1970s. In 1978, Ventura co-founded the LA Weekly along with Joie Davidow, Jay Levin, and Ginger Varney.
Ventura is best known for his long-running column, "Letters at 3 A.M.", which first appeared in LA Weekly in the early 1980s and continued in the Austin Chronicle until 2015. One of his essay collections -- Letters at 3 A.M.: Reports on Endarkenment (1994) -- is an anthology of his most well-known published columns from this period of work. His first essay collection, Shadow-Dancing in the U.S.A. (1985) also collected work that originally appeared in alternative weeklies and other journalistic publications.
Other books by Ventura include If I Was a Highway with Butch Hancock (2017),[2]Cassavetes Directs: John Cassavetes and the Making of Love Streams (2008),[3] and Marilyn Monroe: From Beginning to End (2008).[4]
^Ventura, Michael (July 30, 2017). If I Was a Highway. Lubbock, Texas: Texas Tech University Press. ISBN1682830101.
^Ventura, Michael (April 1, 2008). Cassavetes Directs. Harpenden, UK: Old Castle Books. ISBN1842432281.
^Ventura, Michael (April 1, 2008). Marilyn Monroe: From Beginning to End – Newly Discovered Photographs by Earl Leaf from the Michael Ochs Archive. London, UK: Blandford. ISBN0713727381.