Lawrence Malkin
Lawrence (Larry) Malkin spent a long career as correspondent, editor, and author. He died April 19 at home in Manhattan of kidney failure. He was 91. His energy, curiosity, and loyalty to those he loved will be more than missed by his wife of 62 years Edith (nee Stark), his daughters, Elisabeth (Eduardo Garcia) and Victoria (David Mikics), his grandchildren, Eva, Gabriel and Ariel. He reported on the Six-Day War for The Associated Press and the 1978 Afghanistan Revolution for Time Magazine. His dispatches on the 1960s decline of the British economy won an Overseas Press Club award. He wrote from Paris, London, New Delhi, Madrid, and Washington. He later covered Wall Street for The International Herald Tribune. As editor, he worked with former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker on his memoir “Changing Fortunes.” He edited the memoir of Soviet Ambassador to Washington, Anatoly Dobrynin, “In Confidence,” one of New York Times’ ten best in 1995. He wrote “Krueger’s Men,” about the greatest counterfeit in history: The Nazis selected 140 Jewish prisoners to produce false pound notes in a concentration camp under SS orders. The book was translated into eight languages. Malkin worked with Stuart E. Eizenstat on “Imperfect Justice,” an account of recovering blocked Holocaust accounts, and on “President Carter.” He was born in Richmond Hill, Queens, son of David and Jennie. He is a 1951 graduate of Columbia University and a decorated veteran of the Korean War. His ashes will be placed in the citrus grove of the family’s house in Deia, on the Spanish island of Mallorca. — Published by New York Times on Apr. 24, 2022, https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/nytimes/name/lawrence-malkin-obituary?n=lawrence-malkin&pid=201867397



