Chris Moore

914-409-8087

chris at chrismoorewrites.com

Available for Interview:



High School Dropout now Ivy League graduate, novelist and ghostwriter


Author of UponUs tells your audience:

How to survive starting from nothing

How a construction worker was admitted to Columbia at 27

How he became a ghostwriter from failure

How each new book, as often in life, starts from nothing; a blank page.

How life’s big setbacks are opportunities

The most important lesson clients taught me: LISTEN

And also Humility

Your quirks are your strengths

If you’re bad at something, go slow

…and much more.


I’ve written for highly successful people, incredible advocates, and Holocaust survivors. Each book has a unique voice and requires taking a masters course in that person’s life and personality. Their stories have transformed my writing and my view of the world.

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From the revelations concerning cults like NXIVM, to the anti-family rage displayed on college campuses, editorial boards and in the streets, UponUS puts the current madness and its history into perspective in a fast-paced and emotionally charged thriller.

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Moore worked construction while writing novels until he was accepted into Columbia University at the age of 27. His rejection of the anti-American ethos he encountered while in the ivory tower informs his fiction. He has been called both highly readable and informative. His collaboration with Dorota Nigro on the book Not Just a Number was a finalist for the Indy Book Awards, 2018, and has opened the way to exposing the damage diesel fumes have caused for generations.


Interview Questions

For Chris Moore

Author of UponUS

1.     How did you find yourself starting from nothing (90 seconds)

2.     So … how did you jump from high school dropout to Columbia? Was college your goal? (60 Seconds) Hint: “No, it was an opportunity”

3.     From there, did you go right to ghostwriting? (60 Seconds)

4.     When you write a book with someone, how do you ensure that it actually sounds like them and not you? (1 Minute) LISTENING

5.     Were there a lot of other construction workers at Columbia? (30 Seconds)

6.     But you don’t think everyone should go to college? (30 seconds or less)

7.     Are faculty really as hostile as people think to conservative leaning people? (1 min)

To Schedule An Interview,

Call or Text Chris: 914-409-8087


Controversy

·       Universities are toxic environments for children and a waste of time

·       For the last two decades Universities and to a lesser extent high schools have taught division

·       How the current demonic leftist rage can be traced to the sexual revolution and Satanist Aleister Crowley

·       And so you came up with this book in large part because of the hatred you witnessed from some students

Works

“An engrossing saga that adds significantly to the body of Holocaust literature.”  Abraham H. Foxman, National Director, Anti-Defamation League

“An engrossing saga that adds significantly to the body of Holocaust literature.”

Abraham H. Foxman, National Director, Anti-Defamation League


“Any successful legal formula possesses intelligence plus dogged hard work, but when the ‘Dorota factor’ gets added best advise all opposition to run for cover.” — John C. Dearie, New York State Assemblyman (1973-92)

“Any successful legal formula possesses intelligence plus dogged hard work, but when the ‘Dorota factor’ gets added best advise all opposition to run for cover.” — John C. Dearie, New York State Assemblyman (1973-92)

“I read this book soon after I read Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg and I found No Place for a Lady to be incredibly fearless. It wasn’t so much the fact that the author had witnessed firsthand so many historical moments, interacted with famous people, o…

“I read this book soon after I read Lean In by Sheryl Sandberg and I found No Place for a Lady to be incredibly fearless. It wasn’t so much the fact that the author had witnessed firsthand so many historical moments, interacted with famous people, or fought her way through the glass ceiling but that she was able to move past the abuse inflicted on her as child. She didn’t let it define her, it only made her stronger. She proves that women can have it all.”