John N. Maclean was born in
Chicago, Illinois, in 1943, the second of two children. He graduated from
Shimer College in
Mt. Carroll, Illinois. Maclean began his career in journalism in 1964 as a police reporter with the
City News Bureau of Chicago. He went to work for the
Chicago Tribune the following year. He married Frances Ellen McGeachie in 1968; they have two sons—Daniel, a science teacher in Anchorage, Alaska, and John Fitzroy, a public defender for the state of Maryland. In 1970 Maclean was assigned to the Washington Bureau of the
Tribune. During his newspaper career he spent more than a decade as the
Tribune’s diplomatic correspondent; he was one of the “Kissinger 14,” the journalists who regularly traveled with Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger during the era of shuttle diplomacy. Maclean was a
Nieman Fellow in Journalism at
Harvard University for the 1974-1975 academic year and became the
Tribune’s Foreign Editor in Chicago in 1988. He resigned from the newspaper after the 1994 South Canyon Fire on Colorado's Storm King Mountain killed 14 firefighters. He wrote the story of the fire in his first book,
Fire on the Mountain, which in 2000 won the Mountains and Plains Booksellers award for the best non-fiction book of the year. The book was featured in two documentaries by
Dateline NBC and the
History Channel. Maclean has since written four more books on fatal wildland fires and two others,
Home Waters: A Chronicle of Family and a River, and the centennial edition of Ernest Hemingway's Big Two-Hearted River, for which he wrote the foreword. An avid flyfisherman, he currently divides his time between Washington, D.C., and the family cabin at the edge of Seeley Lake, Montana. ==Publications==