Scott James (born 1962) is a veteran journalist and bestselling author. His reporting has often appeared in The New York Times, and he is the recipient of three Emmy awards for his work in television news.
His most recent book is Trial by Fire: A Devastating Tragedy, 100 Lives Lost, and a 15-Year Search for Truth (Thomas Dunne Books/St. MartinâÂÂs Press, October 27, 2020). In a blend of narrative nonfiction and investigative reporting, the book tells the story of the 2003 Station nightclub fire, when the rock band Great White lit off fireworks inside a small club, igniting an inferno that killed 100 people. The disaster is the deadliest rock concert in United States history, and AmericaâÂÂs deadliest single building fire following the nationwide adoption of improved fire prevention standards in the aftermath of the Beverly Hills Supper Club fire that killed 165 people in 1977.
In the book, several of the tragedy's key figures were interviewed about the fire for the first time, including the nightclubâÂÂs owners, Jeffrey and Michael Derderian, who were convicted in the 100 deaths.
In a starred review, Publishers Weekly called Trial by Fire âÂÂgrippingâ and âÂÂessential reading for true crime fans.âÂÂ
The book was noted for the level of intimacy with its central subjects, where the story is told through their close points of view. A review in Kirkus Reviews described the reporting as âÂÂRashomon territory,â and added, "The authorâÂÂs account is minutely detailed, its technical discussions punctuated by human-interest-story portraits of the victims.âÂÂ
As news director of WLNE-TV in Providence, Rhode Island, James created the long-running investigative series âÂÂYou Paid for It,â which exposed government waste and corruption. James received three Emmy awards and numerous journalism honors for his work at the station, including twice the Associated Press News Station of the Year award. Earlier in his career James worked at KODE-TV in Joplin, Missouri, KJRH-TV in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and interned at NBCâÂÂs âÂÂTodayâ in New York.
In 2009 James began writing for The New York Times. His eponymous weekly column about the San Francisco Bay Area ran in the newspaperâÂÂs Bay Area pages from 2009 to 2012, part of that time in partnership with The Bay Citizen, a non-profit news organization. JamesâÂÂs stories received national and international coverage from other media, including The New Yorker, The Guardian, âÂÂThe Colbert Report,â and âÂÂChelsea Lately.âÂÂ
James has continued to report for The New York Times as a contributor.
James has written fiction under the pen name Kemble Scott. He is the author of two San Francisco Chronicle bestselling novels, The Sower (Numina Press, 2009) and SoMa (Kensington, 2007), a finalist for the national Lambda Literary prize for debut fiction.
James is a graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. He received his BA from Adelphi University.
A New England native, James lives in San Francisco and is a member of the board of directors of Litquake, the cityâÂÂs literary festival, and co-founder of the Castro Writersâ Cooperative, a co-working community for writers.