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Thomas Powers

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Name
  
Thomas Powers

Role
  
Author


Spouse
  
Candace Powers

Education
  
Yale University

Thomas Powers wwwtheatlanticcompastdocsunboundpowersimage

Awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting

Nominations
  
National Book Award for General Nonfiction (Hardcover)

Books
  
The Killing of Crazy Horse, Heisenberg's war, Intelligence Wars, The Confirmation, The Military Error: Baghdad

DIGITAL AGE - Who Is Responsible For The Intelligence Failure in Iraq?- Thomas Powers. Sept 15, 2004


Thomas Powers (New York City, December 12, 1940) is an American author and intelligence expert.

Contents

He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in 1971 together with Lucinda Franks for his articles on Weatherman member Diana Oughton (1942-1970). He was also the recipient of the Olive Branch award in 1984 for a cover story on the Cold War that appeared in The Atlantic, a 2007 Berlin Prize, and for his 2010 book on Crazy Horse the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for History.

Life and works

Born in New York City in 1940, he was a 1958 graduate of Tabor Academy. Powers later attended Yale University where he graduated in 1964 with a degree in English. At first he worked for the Rome Daily American in Italy, later for United Press International. In 1970 he became a freelance writer.

Powers is the author of six works of non-fiction and one novel. His The Man who Kept Secrets: Richard Helms and the CIA (1979) is "widely regarded as one of the best books ever written on the subject of intelligence." His work on Werner Heisenberg tracks secret developments in nuclear physics during the 1930s and early 1940s.

The revised edition of his Intelligence Wars contains twenty-eight articles previously published in the New York Review of Books and the New York Times Book Review from 1983 to 2004. His most recent book follows the life of Crazy Horse (died Nebraska 1877). Evan Thomas in The New York Times, while reviewing this book, also commented broadly on Powers as an author and a previous work on Richard Helms:

Powers is "a great journalistic anthropologist. In possibly the best book ever written about the C.I.A, The Man Who Kept the Secrets, Powers took the reader on a fascinating journey into the world of secret intelligence gathering and covert action. The C.I.A. was, at least in the early years of the cold war, a tribe as mysterious and exotic as the Great Plains Sioux of the 1870s. And Powers tells us much that is revealing and often moving about the Sioux in their last days as free warriors".

Powers has been a contributor to The New York Review of Books, The Atlantic, The Los Angeles Times, The New York Times Book Review, Harper's, The Nation, Commonweal, and Rolling Stone.

Besides writing, Powers joined a partnership to found in 1993 a publishing company, Steerforth Press. Originally located in South Royalton, Vermont, it is now located in Hanover, New Hampshire. Its website self describes as a "small independent house" with a "range of titles on a variety of topics".

Powers and his wife Candace live in Vermont. In 1979 he was living with his wife and three daughters in New York City. "He is currently writing a memoir of his father, who once told him that the last time he met Clare Boothe Luce was in the office of Allen Dulles."

References

Thomas Powers Wikipedia


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