|

|
David Karp (1958? - ),
Fruit Detective
David Karp was already fluent in Latin when he graduated from High
School. At the age of 20, while majoring in Medieval Studies
at Wesleyan University, he published a translation of the 6th-century
Latin author Venantius Fortunatus.
After graduation, he started a successful career in risk arbitrage
and option trading on Wall Street. Recovering from a serious drug
addiction, however, he changed course and started his new career
as a free-lance fruit writer and photographer for the L.A. Times.
Conspicuous in his pith helmet, Karp researches exotic fruit and
uncommon varieties of common fruit both on California farmers markets
and abroad for high-end specialty stores like Dean & DeLuca
in New York, and he publishes his discoveries in regular columns
in the Los Angeles Times and Gourmet, sometimes also
in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal.
Now one of the best known experts in his self-chosen field, he was
featured in a six-page article in The New Yorker (Aug. 19&26,
2002, pp. 70-79).
Click here for a link to the California
Rare Fruit Growers, whose Fruit Gardener magazine regularly
features beautiful fruit photographs and articles by David Karp.
|