Nisha Rathode (Editor)

C B Colby

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Author

Nationality
  
American

Name
  
C. Colby


C. B. Colby httpswwwpulpartistscomBio20MaterialsColby

Born
  
Carroll Burleigh ColbySeptember 7, 1904Claremont, New Hampshire,United States (
1904-09-07
)

Died
  
October 31, 1977(1977-10-31) (aged 73)Westchester County, New YorkUnited States

Genre
  
Military history, weapons, children's books

Carroll Burleigh Colby (September 7, 1904 – October 31, 1977) was a prolific American writer, primarily of nonfiction children's books. He wrote approximately 93 books that were widely circulated in public and school libraries in the United States. He is best known for Strangely Enough! (1959).

Contents

Early life

Colby was born in Claremont, New Hampshire, graduated from Stevens High School in 1922, and then attended the School of Practical Art in Boston, where he graduated in 1925.

He sailed to Puerto Rico with the intention of being a free-lance artist, but his failure led him to join the U.S. Customs Service during the Prohibition era. He married Lila Thoday in November 1928, having two children, Fred and Susan M. Colby.

Writing career

Colby sold his first fiction story in 1929.

Learning to fly glider aircraft in 1931, Colby began writing and illustrating articles for various aviation magazines, becoming an editor of Air Trails and Air Progress magazines that were Street & Smith publications. He co-authored the Junior Birdmen Standard Aviation Dictionary for the Junior Birdmen of America. In 1943 he became aviation editor of Popular Science magazine and became a war correspondent with the U.S. Army Air Forces in Newfoundland, Labrador, and Alaska. He left the magazine in 1946 to free-lance articles. Colby enlisted and served as an officer with the Civil Air Patrol.

Colby's first book was early in 1951 as by "Carroll Colby": Gabbit, the Magic Rabbit, a self-illustrated picture book about a magician's rabbit who turns the tables. He began his non-fiction book writing with Our Fighting Jets in 1951. He specialized in outdoor subjects such as hunting, fishing, camping, and firearms. Many of his books were about military and public safety organizations or new technology, designed to be understood by children.

In 1959 Colby wrote his most popular book, Strangely Enough!, a collection of short non-fiction narrative about true life adventure, paranormal mysteries, UFO's, and other unusual events.

Selected works

  • Gabbit, the Magic Rabbit (Coward-McCann, 1951), self-illustrated, OCLC 53094868
  • Art and Science of Taking to the Woods
  • Bomber Parade Headliners in Bomber Plane History
  • Chute!: Air Drop for Defense and Sport
  • Submarine Warfare: Men, Weapons, and Ships
  • FBI: The G-Mens' Weapons and Tactics For Combat
  • Six-shooter: Pistols, Revolvers, And Automatics, Past And Present
  • Strangely Enough!
  • Two centuries of weapons, 1776-1976
  • Jets of the World: New Fighters, Bombers and Transports
  • Fighter Parade: Headliners in Fighter Plane History
  • First Rifle: How to Shoot It Straight and Use It Safe
  • Musket to M-14 Pistols, Rifles and Machine Guns
  • Leatherneck: The Training, Weapons and Equipment of the United States Marine Corps
  • Fighting Gear of World War II Equipment and Weapons of the American G.I.
  • The Weirdest People in the World
  • World's Best True Ghost Stories
  • World's Best Lost Treasure Stories
  • References

    C. B. Colby Wikipedia


    Similar Topics