

About Us
Garry J. Moes, Graybrook Writer & Editor

Garry J. Moes is a veteran journalist, author, essayist, editor, freelance writer, blogger and journalism teacher. He holds a journalism degree from Michigan State University's College of Communication Arts (1966) and served as a professor and academic vice president of the Nordic College of Journalism, Scandinavian Christian University in Sweden (1985-87), during which time he first created WorldCom Consulting and, later, the Graybrook Institute.
Prior to that, he was a general assignment reporter, sportswriter, broadcast writer, investigative reporter and full-time government and political reporter for The Associated Press for 21 years. Before entering a subsequent freelance career, he was assistant managing editor/editorial page editor for a New Mexico newspaper. He served as director of development and communications at Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary in South Carolina. He is currently executive director of TeenWorks Mentoring Inc., a nonprofit organization providing compassionate role-modeling adult mentors for at-risk youth.
Mr. Moes is the author of Streams of Civilization, Vol. II, a modern history of Western Civilization; author and designer of an 8-volume spelling textbook series Building Spelling Skills; and author/editor of a 6-volume grammar textbook series, Applications of Grammar, all published by Christian Liberty Press. He was editor of the monthly religion-and-society opinion journal Chalcedon Report and the scholarly annual Journal of Christian Reconstruction. He served as editor for several full-length books written by other authors. Mr. Moes was also the creator and executive editor of Crosswinds: The Reformation Journal. He has written a comprehensive journalism syllabus, A Watchman of the Nation. He has served as both European and domestic correspondent for World newsmagazine and did news reporting work in Nicaragua for a Dutch news agency. Mr. Moes spent several years doing clandestine human rights work in Communist countries of Eastern Europe.
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