Amram Mayer Ducovny (September 11, 1927 – August 23, 2003)[2] was an American non-fiction writer, playwright and novelist.
His father, Moshe Duchovny, who came to the United States in 1918 from Berdychiv, Russian Empire (now in Ukraine), was a noted Yiddish writer and journalist, who wrote for the Morning Journal, among other publications.
He wrote ten nonfiction books and a play The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald that was brought into Broadway in 1967, and was soon thereafter adapted for television.
[5] In 2001, Ducovny fulfilled his lifelong dream and published a novel, Coney, which received several positive reviews.
It was based on his early experiences as the child of Jewish immigrants before World War II.