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Josh Alan Friedman : ウィキペディア英語版 | Josh Alan Friedman
Josh Alan Friedman (born February 22, 1956) is an American musician, writer, editor and journalist, who has worked in New York and Dallas. He is widely known for his 1986 collection ''Tales of Times Square'' and his often-controversial comix collaborations with his brother, artist Drew Friedman. Many of these are compiled in the books ''Any Similarity to Persons Living or Dead is Purely Coincidental'' and ''Warts and All''. Friedman is also a successful musician and songwriter, recording and performing under the moniker Josh Alan.〔"Josh Alan: The Czar of Atomic Acoustic Guitar," ''Washington City Paper'', November 14, 1997.〕 ==Biography== Son of author-playwright Bruce Jay Friedman and acting coach Ginger Howard Friedman, Josh Alan was the eldest of three boys. They grew up in Glen Cove and Great Neck in Nassau County on Long Island and in New York City. In 1962 in Glen Cove, Josh began first grade at South School, then the last ''de facto'' segregated school on Long Island. He was the sole white student. His years attending South School at the flashpoint of the African-American Civil Rights Movement, the childhood friendships forged there, and his occasionally life-threatening adventures in Long Island's forgotten Black shantytowns subsequently informed his "autobiographical novel" ''Black Cracker'' (2010). (He published an early story from ''Black Cracker'' in ''Penthouse'' in August 1978.) Friedman has defined his creative identity as "51% guitar and 49% writing."
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