Katherine Eban Bio, Age, Height, Husband, Salary, Net Worth Vanity Fair

Katherine Eban
Katherine Eban

Katherine Eban Biography

Katherine Eban is popularly to be a contributor at Vanity Fair. A writer based in Brooklyn, and an Andrew Carnegie fellow. She worked in different firms such as ABC News, the New York Times, the New York Observer, as well as New York before.

Eban also is an investigative reporter centering her attention on public health and homeland issues. Katherine studied and graduated from both Brown University and the University of Oxford.

Katherine Eban Age

Katherine has managed to keep details on her exact date, age, place, and year of birth away from the public.

Katherine Eban Height

Eban stands at an average height of 5 feet 6 inches/1.67 m tall.

Katherine Eban Education

Eban studied at  Brown University, University of East Anglia. And received a degree, then she moved to the University of Oxford. Where she earned an MPhil in English Literature.

Katherine Eban Family

Her parents are Michael O. Finkelstein who works as a corporate lawyer. And Elinor (née Fuchs) who works as a professor at the Yale School of Drama.

Katherine Eban Husband

Eban is a happy married woman to Ken Levenson who works as an Architect. The duo has two kids and they stay in Brooklyn. Also, they have a Newfoundland dog named Romeo.

Katherine Eban Salary

Eban annually earns a salary of $80,000.

Katherine Eban Net worth

Eban has an approximated net worth of $2 million.

Katherine Eban Career

Eban is popularly to be a contributor at Vanity Fair. A writer based in Brooklyn, and an Andrew Carnegie fellow. She worked in different firms such as ABC News, the New York Times, the New York Observer, as well as New York before.

Katherine also is an investigative reporter centering her attention on public health and homeland issues. She studied and graduated from both Brown University and the University of Oxford. Eban has authored two books;  Bottle of Lies. In 2019: The Inside Story of the Generic Drug Boom.

Was published and The Dangerous Doses: a True Story of Cops, Counterfeiters. And the Contamination of America’s Drug Supply, according to Kirkus Reviews was one of the Best Books of 2005.

The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation gave her grants to support her books.  From the Overseas Press Club of America, Bottle of Lies won the Cornelius Ryan Award additionally.