Paul Dickson
is the author of more than 45 nonfiction books and
hundreds of magazine articles. Although he has written on a variety of
subjects from ice cream to kite flying to electronic warfare, he now
concentrates on writing about the American language, baseball and 20th
century history.
Dickson, born in Yonkers, NY, graduated from
Wesleyan University in 1961 and was honored as a Distinguished Alumnus
of that institution in 2001. After graduation, he served in the U.S.
Navy and later worked as a reporter for McGraw-Hill
Publications.
Since 1968, he has been a full-time freelance
writer. He has contributed articles to various magazines and newspapers,
including Smithsonian, Esquire, The Nation,
Town & Country, The New York Times, The Los
Angeles Times, and The Washington Post and written
numerous books on a wide range of subjects.
He received a University
Fellowship for reporters from the American Political Science Association
to do his first book, Think Tanks (1971) and for his book
The Electronic Battlefield (1976), about the impact automatic
weapons systems have had on modern warfare, he received a grant from the
Fund for Investigative Journalism to support his efforts to get certain
Pentagon files declassified.
His most recent book The Hidden
Language of Baseball: How Signs and Sign Stealing Have Influenced the
Course of our National Pastime was published in May, 2003 by Walker
& Co. and follows other works of baseball reference including The
Joy of Keeping Score, Baseball’s Greatest Quotations, Baseball the
President’s Game and The New Dickson Baseball Dictionary.
The original Dickson Baseball Dictionary was awarded the 1989
Macmillan-SABR Award for Baseball Research.
Sputnik: the Shock of
the Century, also published by Walker & Co, came out in
October, 2001 and was subsequently issued in paperback by Berkeley
Books. Both his first book, Think Tanks (1971), and
Sputnik were born of his first loveinvestigative
journalismand examine the forces that have shaped the way we live
in the information age.
He is currently working with Thomas B.
Allen on a book about the Bonus Army of World War I veterans who first
marched on, occupied and were subseqently driven from Washington in
1932. They were protesting the fact that the bonus promised them for
their war time service was not scheduled to be paid until 1945. The
book, to be called The Bonus Army: An American Epic, will be
published by Walker & Co in February 2005.
Dickson is a
founding member and former president of Washington Independent Writers
and a member of the National Press Club. He is a contributing editor at
Washingtonian magazine and a consulting editor at Merriam-Webster, Inc.
He is represented by Premier Speakers Bureau, Inc. and the Jonathan
Dolger Literary agency.
He currently lives in Garrett Park,
Maryland with his wife Nancy who works with him as his first line
editor, and financial manager.
Thomas B. Allen is an author whose writings range from articles for
National Geographic Magazine to books on a variety of subjects.
Allen’s most recent books are George Washington,
Spymaster, which tells how espionage helped to win the
Revolutionary War, and Spy Book: The Encyclopedia of
Espionage.
Allen is the co-author, with Paul Dickson, of
The Bonus Army: An American Epic, the story of the ill-fated
World War I veterans who marched on Washington in 1932 and were driven
out by Army troops under command of Gen. Douglas MacArthur. The book
will be published by Walker and Company in February 2005. It is a
selection of the History Book Club.
The New York Public
Library has selected George Washington, Spymaster, as one of
the 100 best children's books of 2004. An earlier Allen book,
Remember Pearl Harbor, also published by National Geographic,
was selected as one of the Notable Books of 2001 by the American Library
Association.
Spy Book, co-authored with Norman Polmar,
is the principal source book for the International Spy Museum. The
revised 2003 edition has more than 100 new entries
As a frequent
contributor to National Geographic Magazine, he has written on
such subjects as Xinjiang China, Mongolia, and Turkey. His World War II
articles covered D-Day, the attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Eighth Air
Force, and the Battle of Midway. Other articles: the search for the
giant squid, the sinking of the U.S.S. Maine, and the search for Cuba's
sunken treasure ships. The Geographic articles have been
published in the Japanese, Israeli, Greek, and Latin American editions
of the Magazine. He also lectures on National Geographic
Expeditions to the sites of historic events, such as Pearl Harbor and
D-Day.
Allen was Associate Chief of the National
Geographic Society’s Book Service from 1974 until 1981, when
he left the Society to freelance as a writer and editor. After leaving
the Society he wrote for several Society books, including Field
Guide to North American Birds, Inventors and Discoverers,
Journey Into China, Into the Unknown, Exploring
England and Ireland, Liberty: the Statue and the American
Dream, America’s Outdoor Wonders, Photography
Then and Now, and We Americans. During his career at the
National Geographic Society, Allen worked as an editor and writer on
twenty-eight Society books.
Allen was a consultant and on-screen
speaker for the Documedia series “Secrets of War” for the
History Channel. He has frequently appeared on television as an
authority on military and intelligence subjects. He has also produced
editorial contributions to web pages of the National Museum of American
History, the National Portrait Gallery, the National Geographic Society,
and Kodak.
His book Possessed reveals in detail the real
exorcism that was the basis for the movie “The Exorcist.”
Possessed was adapted for a Showtime movie of the same name. His
Shark Attacks is an authoritative analysis of attacks
throughout the world.
Prior to his work at the National Geographic
Society, Allen was, from 1964 to 1965, Managing Editor, Trade Book
Division, Chilton Books. From 1956 to 1963, he was a feature writer on
The New York Daily News. Prior to that, he worked as a reporter
and columnist for the Bridgeport (Conn.) Herald and served two
years in the U.S. Navy.
He and his wife Scottie, a potter and
member of Creative Partners Gallery, live in Bethesda, Maryland.