Dwyer is the author or co-author of six non-fiction books, including the below:
More Awesome Than Money More Awesome Than Money: Four Boys, Three Years, and a Chronicle of Ideals and Ambition in Silicon Valley (published November 2015), is a non-fiction account of four boys who set out to combat
Facebook's monopoly on
social media by building an alternative social network called
Diaspora. Writing in
The Daily Beast, Jake Whitney described the book as "a thrilling read, astoundingly detailed and researched, alternately suspenseful and heartbreaking." The book follows the four
New York University undergraduates as they are inspired by the law professor and historian
Eben Moglen to create a better social network, through a deluge of support they receive on
Kickstarter in 2010, the death of co-founder
Ilya Zhitomirskiy in 2011, up until the transfer of the project in 2013 to a community of free software developers who continue to refine it. Their work is placed in the context of the dynamic relationships between the open web, digital surveillance, and free society, and the continuing efforts of groups like the
Mozilla Foundation to prevent domination of the web by commercial interests. "In the shadows, more and more idealists express their opposition in code — hackers with a moral compass,"
Marcus Brauchli wrote in
The Washington Post, calling the book a "lively account" that "finds heroism and success, betrayal and even, ultimately, tragedy in the hurtling pursuit of a cause."
False Conviction False Conviction: Innocence, Science and Guilt (2014), is an interactive book created in collaboration with
Touch Press, the leading developer of "living books", and the
New York Hall of Science. Using video, animations, and text, the book explores the science behind errors in the courtroom and criminal investigations and shows routine safeguards that other fields use to guard against them. The reader can play interactive games in the book that show how everyday mistakes can turn into false convictions. "Nonscientists will find the book's discussion of these complex scientific questions clear and accessible, and scientists will find them deep and detailed enough to maintain interest and spark further inquiry", Hugh McDonald wrote in the museum journal
Exhibitionist. "
False Conviction makes its case for reform...and does so strongly and engagingly....These compelling stories of tragedy, science and the search for the truth are available for a much broader audience than if they were the subject of a classic bricks and mortar exhibition. With
False Conviction, The New York Hall of Science proves that museums can move beyond their own walls to create compelling investigations of complex issues at the intersection of science and society." Conceived by Eric Siegel, the chief content officer of the Hall of Science, and
Peter Neufeld, the co-founder of the
Innocence Project, the book was developed by the Hall of Science, in consultation with the Innocence Project, with a grant from the
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation's program for Public Understanding of Science, Technology & Economics.
102 Minutes 102 Minutes: The Untold Story of the Fight to Survive Inside the Twin Towers (2005), co-written with
Kevin Flynn, an editor at
The New York Times Company, was a 2005
National Book Award finalist. The book chronicled the 102 minutes that the twin towers of the
World Trade Center stood after the
attacks of September 11, 2001, began. The sources included interviews with survivors, tapes of police and fire operations, 911 calls, and other material obtained under
freedom of information requests including 20,000 pages of tape transcripts,
oral histories, and other documents.
Actual Innocence and Two Seconds Under the World Dwyer co-authored
Actual Innocence: Five Days to Execution and Other Dispatches from the Wrongly Convicted (2000), a "pathbreaking" exploration of the causes of wrongful convictions. More than a decade after its publication, according to an article in the
University of Chicago Law Review: "As had never been done before,
Actual Innocence presented story after story of wrongful convictions (and near executions) of the indisputably innocent, with each chapter devoted to exposing each of these flaws in the justice system.
Actual Innocence was nothing short of a revelation, a wake-up call concerning the reality of wrongful convictions and the truth-telling power of DNA evidence. It was not merely descriptive; it was also prescriptive, setting out a lengthy recipe of reforms needed to prevent future wrongful convictions." Writing in
The Washington Post, Yardley commented: "
Subway Lives is a book that not merely tells you everything you secretly wanted to know about subways; it also allows you to see New York from a novel, revealing vantage point...In every way, it's a terrific book." In the
Los Angeles Times, Devon Jerslid wrote: "
Subway Lives may be hard-boiled, but it's best understood as an epic poem, and Dwyer himself comes across as a faintly Homeric figure, a late 20th-century urban bard who finds something heroic in (and under) the mean streets of Gotham." Much of the material for the book came from his job as the
subway columnist from 1986 to 1989 for
New York Newsday. ==Film and theater==