He published his first novel The Ground Swell while attending
Amherst College.[2] His college attendance was interrupted by service in the Navy. After graduating, he worked in the advertising industry, published several more works of fiction and non-fiction, and eventually re-entered military service during World War II.[2] He was later the vice president of the New York Herald Tribune and publisher of the Milford Citizen, a newspaper in
Milford, Connecticut.[3]
Force Mulberry: The Planning and Installation of the
Artificial Harbor off U. S.
Normandy Beaches in World War II (William Morrow, 1951)[18][19][20]
Boatman's Handbook: Ninety-six Jobs You Can Do on Your Own Boat (Motorboat Publications, 1957)
Far Horizons: Adventures in Cruising by Members of the Cruising Club of America, edited by Alfred Stanford, David L. Bacon, and Charles H. Vilas (
Cruising Club of America, 1971)
He published his first novel The Ground Swell while attending
Amherst College.[2] His college attendance was interrupted by service in the Navy. After graduating, he worked in the advertising industry, published several more works of fiction and non-fiction, and eventually re-entered military service during World War II.[2] He was later the vice president of the New York Herald Tribune and publisher of the Milford Citizen, a newspaper in
Milford, Connecticut.[3]
Force Mulberry: The Planning and Installation of the
Artificial Harbor off U. S.
Normandy Beaches in World War II (William Morrow, 1951)[18][19][20]
Boatman's Handbook: Ninety-six Jobs You Can Do on Your Own Boat (Motorboat Publications, 1957)
Far Horizons: Adventures in Cruising by Members of the Cruising Club of America, edited by Alfred Stanford, David L. Bacon, and Charles H. Vilas (
Cruising Club of America, 1971)