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Leslie Ruth Guttman

1964 - 2022

Leslie Ruth Guttman obituary, 1964-2022, San Francisco, CA

BORN

1964

DIED

2022

Leslie Guttman Obituary

Leslie Ruth Guttman
October 10, 1964 - March 14, 2022
Journalist and author Leslie Guttman, whose puckish wit and graceful, empathetic feature writing enlivened the pages of The San Francisco Chronicle for 18 years—and publications and radio stations across the country thereafter—died March 14 in her native Kentucky after months of suffering from a rare combination of a medication reaction and a previously undiagnosed medical condition. She was 57.
Following her graduation with a degree in journalism from Indiana University, Leslie got her feet wet in the profession with writing and editing stints at suburban publications in the Bay Area, the Lafayette Sun and the Peninsula Times Tribune, then started her Chronicle career as a copy editor in 1987. She edited and wrote for a variety of Chronicle sections including the now-defunct Sunday Punch, This World and Briefing.
Leslie cared deeply about the mission of journalism, but she also found writing and editing just plain fun. She brought to her writing a fierce sense of purpose, an elegant writing style and a keen eye for the telling detail. Personal and social quirks and human stories off the beaten track delighted her. She loved the opportunity to use her writing skills to call attention to people who weren't patently newsworthy, especially those on society's margins. She told their stories with deference and heart. Among her moving personal essays was a description of her encounter in a bookstore with a penniless woman who tried to steal a book on grieving after losing her grandmother.
As in everything she did, her writing embodied what one relative referred to as her "generosity of spirit." Her spirit was on open display in an essay she wrote in The Chronicle in 2001, about an egret she grew accustomed to seeing daily while driving to work along the shoreline in Berkeley. One day, the egret simply wasn't there anymore. "Then," she wrote, "months later during a dull commute, after I had almost forgotten about the egret, I passed his spot and the tumblers finally clicked: In the middle of everything, when life seems ordinary or frustrating, something mysterious and beautiful is always waiting to look you straight in the eye."
Leslie's outsized talent was recognized early in her career with an Outstanding Young Journalist of the Year award from the Northern California Society of Professional Journalists.
Other professional honors followed over the years, including 13 Chronicle staff awards for excellence in editing and writing, the Peninsula Press Club first-place award for feature writing, a Salute to Excellence Award from the National Association of Black Journalists, a Yaddo screenwriting residency, and a Kentucky Foundation for Women grant for her screenplay "Black Breeze." She was named 2020 Editor of the Year by The 431 Exchange nonprofit.
Leslie was a beloved figure in the Chronicle newsroom, warm, playful, spirited and deeply caring, with an ear for everyone's joys and burdens. Said one colleague, "Leslie sparkled." In Facebook posts, others commented on her high-wattage smile. Her nimble wit is still treasured by those who knew her. One colleague recalled that whenever he would "natter on about something in a self-involved way, Leslie would interrupt to say, 'But enough about you. Let's talk about me.'"
Yet another former co-worker cherished the memory of her legendary tribute to Christmas fruitcakes – a story that was shared, computer to computer, around the Chronicle newsroom. In it, she declared unapologetically: "I like fruitcake," then elaborated:
"Fruitcake is the perfect eco-food. It lasts forever, yet appears 100 percent biodegradable. It is easier to recycle than used Evian bottles."
After leaving the Chronicle in 2005, Leslie gained national attention with lively feature stories and commentaries in newspapers, magazines and radio programs including NPR's "All Things Considered" and "Morning Edition," Men's Journal, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Salon, Orion, Paste, Marketplace, WNYC, "Here and Now" (WBUR, Boston), KQED in San Francisco and WEKU-FM in Central Kentucky.
Early in the online era, Leslie wrote but apparently never published a novel in which the story was told entirely through text-message exchanges. Her best-selling book "Equine ER: Stories From a Year in the Life of an Equine Veterinary Hospital," published in 2009, was an immersive account of the relationship between horses and the veterinarians who treat them. It was a No. 1 Kindle best-seller on Amazon. The book has been used by educators in veterinary medicine and related fields. New York Times best-selling author Susan Richards said the book was "as thrilling and drama-filled as any of the popular hospital shows on television today."
To help support her personal writing projects, Leslie edited and ghostwrote books for high-profile entrepreneurs through Scribe Media; three of those books were Amazon best-sellers. She also invested in and managed real estate, as had other family members before her. That vocation resulted in the podcast Rental Property Girl ("real estate investing for women") and a finance book for women, "Landlord Shavasana: How to Buy your first rental property and stay relaxed and true to yourself while doing so." By some reports, Leslie was the most tenant-friendly landlady in the state of Kentucky.
Leslie also worked as a content strategist for clients ranging from Fortune 500 companies to a civil rights nonprofit and a web services firm. She has been a writing coach and editor of both fiction and nonfiction for the Carnegie Center.
Along with writing and journalism, Leslie loved, in no particular order, books, gossip, raffish hats, horses, four-leaf clovers, words, laughter, storytelling, her dog Daisy, lipstick, writers, her cat, "statement" fashion, schmoozing, flowers, music, her mother, brothers, nephews and niece, her sister-in-law Jennifer ... and salsa dancing, of which she once wrote:
"Salsa—the sensual Latin partner dance—isn't a hot new trend in the Bay Area, it's more like a tropical plant that keeps growing in every direction, blooming in wild colors and in out-of-the-way places."
Above all, Leslie loved people. Every one of her vast circle of friends throughout the country felt as if Leslie was their closest friend and most devoted confidant -- and they all were.
Leslie is survived by her mother, Estelle Guttman; brothers Jerry Guttman and Steven (Jennifer) Guttman; nephews Riley Guttman and Ethan Guttman; niece Rose Guttman; cousins from across the United States and Canada, and legions of dear friends in the Bay Area and Lexington, Ky. She was preceded in death by her father, David E. Guttman, and her stepfather, Joseph Hamburg.
Funeral services were held on March 17. Memorial contributions may be sent to Temple Adath Israel, 124 N. Ashland Ave., Lexington, KY 40502 or to Doctors Without Borders.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by San Francisco Chronicle on Mar. 25, 2022.

Memories and Condolences
for Leslie Guttman

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Christine Farrell

June 5, 2025

Leslie´s smile outshines the sun!!! I would see her occasionally at family get togethers. She is a bright light I will always cherish

ROLAND WALKER

December 11, 2024

Today, for some reason, I felt moved to see what Leslie was up to. While working for the Chronicle, she had rented an in-law unit attached to my then-home in the Rockridge area of Oakland. I took pleasure reading her Chronicle work product, knowing that she, the talent producing the article, lived on the other side of the interior wall from me. I heartily affirm all the compliments already delivered here; she was a lovely talent, one prematurely lost to us all.

Anonymous

August 8, 2023

What a wonderful, hard-working and kind-hearted person Leslie must've been. I wish I could've met her. So thankful for all her work with a variety of authors... she was given high praise in "The Importance of Being Ernest: The Life of Actor Jim Varney (Stuff that Vern doesn't even know)." Sending my condolences.

Peter Kupfer

July 7, 2023

I still find it hard to believe that Leslie is gone. I worked with Leslie for many years at the Chronicle and she was a beautiful person, inside and out. She was always a pleasure to be around - warm, witty, smart, supportive. And that dazzling smile, I will never forget. RIP Leslie. You will be missed.

Christine Farrell

March 16, 2022

I am heartbroken over the loss of such a beautiful and talented lady! I met Leslie when her brother Steve and my sister Jennifer got engaged. We got to spend some time together at family gatherings, when we were in the Bay Area, and her love for her niece Rosie and her nephews Riley and Ethan was unconditional. I have not seen Leslie in many years but I remember her bright smile and infectious laugh. I will carry her in my heart always. May her memory be for a Blessing.

Lesley Simpson

March 16, 2022

I am gutted by the loss of this beautiful human being. I first met Leslie after I married Mark Guttman and we had a "kesher" right away-- through our love of writing, journalism, and stories of newsrooms far and wide. She asked me to review the book she wrote about women in the real estate business, and I saw how she used her observation skills and savvy to assess tenants. Her book was also underpinned by a spirit of generosity. I always remember she advised buying the best appliances for your tenants because they will appreciate a good washing machine, a great fridge or a high efficiency furnace. That generous spirit was part of her soul, warm and giving. After Covid hit and she joined our Passover zoom seder we subsequently enjoyed many zoom dinners together, connecting us from Toronto to Kentucky....
I send big hugs from Toronto to her friends and family far and wide. A shining star has fallen from the sky .May her memory be for a blessing.

Hal and Joan Wolf

March 16, 2022

Want you to know that our hearts are with you and all the family. We'll always remember Leslie as beautiful, smart and kind. Wish we could be there with you. We send love - all the Wolfs

Group of 10 Memorial Trees

Her tango friends

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Memorial Events
for Leslie Guttman

Mar

17

Visitation

10:15 a.m. - 11:00 a.m.

Temple Adath Israel

124 N. Ashland Ave., Lexington, KY

Mar

17

Funeral

11:00 a.m.

Temple Adath Israel

124 N. Ashland Ave., Lexington, KY

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