logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
Jessica Stern
Jessica Stern is one of the foremost experts on terrorism. She serves on the Hoover Institution Task Force on National Security and Law. In 2009, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for her work on trauma and violence. Jessica is a member of the Trilateral Commission and the Council on... show more
Jessica Stern is one of the foremost experts on terrorism. She serves on the Hoover Institution Task Force on National Security and Law. In 2009, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for her work on trauma and violence. Jessica is a member of the Trilateral Commission and the Council on Foreign Relations. She was named a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellow, National Fellow at the Hoover Institution, fellow of the World Economic Forum, and a Harvard MacArthur Fellow.She has authored TERROR IN THE NAME OF GOD: Why Religious Militants Kill, selected by the New York Times as a notable book of the year; THE ULTIMATE TERRORISTS; and numerous articles on terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. She served on President Clinton's National Security Council Staff in 1994-95 (read a May 1995 letter and July 1995 letter from the President and this note from the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs expressing their gratitude for her work and contribution).Jessica was included in Time magazine's series profiling 100 people with bold ideas. The film, "The Peacemaker", with Nicole Kidman and George Clooney, was based on a fictional version of Jessica's work at the National Security Council. Her new book, DENIAL: A Memoir of Terror, is now available, published by Ecco, a HarperCollins imprint. She lives in Cambridge, MA.
show less
Jessica Stern's Books
Recently added on shelves
Jessica Stern's readers
Share this Author
Community Reviews
XOX
XOX rated it 10 years ago
Let see what they are selling. Religious persons who are drawn to ISIS, even after they murdered people on TV, is because they already shared with ISIS the same religion, and swallowing more religious bullshit is not that hard to do for some already religious people. The liberals and most of the...
coffee & ink
coffee & ink rated it 14 years ago
When she was fifteen, Stern and her fourteen-year-old sister were raped at gunpoint by a stranger who invaded her house; Stern responded with a kind of emotional freeze that allowed her, years later, to interview terrorists without turning a hair, and which she only even later realized was a result ...
coffee & ink
coffee & ink rated it 14 years ago
When she was fifteen, Stern and her fourteen-year-old sister were raped at gunpoint by a stranger who invaded her house; Stern responded with a kind of emotional freeze that allowed her, years later, to interview terrorists without turning a hair, and which she only even later realized was a result ...
A Book and A Review #2
A Book and A Review #2 rated it 14 years ago
To be totally honest, this book is very perplexing to me. I understand the author's career and her training/background, but it is very odd to see a story about her rape and subsequent follow up and family reaction written in a detached manner, as though she is a law enforcement officer writing a cas...
Chew & Digest Books
Chew & Digest Books rated it 15 years ago
This is so not what I thought that it was going to be and I am very happy for that. Stern is musing on denial and its effects with PTSD in rape, war and any other trauma by looking back at the trauma of her own rape and rapist. Dispassionately Passionate is the phrase that kept coming to mind while ...
see community reviews
Need help?