Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pulitzer-winning restaurant critic Gold dies at 57

- The Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — Jonathan Gold, who became the first restaurant critic to win the Pulitzer Prize for criticism, has died. He was 57.

The Los Angeles Times, where Gold most recently worked, reported that he died Saturday after being diagnosed earlier this month with pancreatic cancer. “I can’t imagine the city without him. It just feels wrong. I feel like we won’t have our guide, we won’t have the soul,” said Laura Gabbert, who directed “City of Gold,” a 2015 documentar­y about the critic. “It’s such a loss. I can’t wrap my head around it still.”

Gold’s reviews first appeared in

L.A. Weekly and later in The Times and Gourmet. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 2007 while at L.A. Weekly. He was a finalist again in 2011.

“There will never be another like Jonathan Gold, who will forever be our brilliant, indispensa­ble guide through the culinary paradise that is Los Angeles,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said in a statement. “Jonathan earned worldwide acclaim as a food critic, but he possessed the soul of a poet whose words helped readers everywhere understand the history and culture of our city.”

The Times noted Gold’s reviews, appearing in his column called Counter Intelligen­ce, focused on “hole-in-the-wall joints, street food, mom-and-pop shops and ethnic restaurant­s,” which he preferred to call traditiona­l restaurant­s.

Known as J. Gold, he had a distinctiv­e style, wearing suspenders, a slightly rumpled button-down shirt, mustache and mop of feathery strawberry blond hair.

Ruth Reichl, who edited Gold at The Times and at Gourmet, called him a trailblaze­r.

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Jonathan Gold

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