Rick Atkinson

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Rick Atkinson
Rick Atkinson - 2015 National Book Festival (5).jpg
at 2015 National Book Festival
Born Lawrence Rush Atkinson IV
(1952-11-16) November 16, 1952 (age 72)
Munich, then West Germany
Residence Washington, D. C.
Alma mater
Occupation
  • Journalist, editor
  • historian, author
Agent
  • Raphael Sagalyn
  • ICM/Sagalyn
  • 1250 Connecticut Ave NW 7th Floor
  • Washington, DC 20036
Spouse(s) Jane Ann Chestnut (dentist), May 12, 1979
Children Rush, Sarah
Parent(s)
Awards
Website The Liberation Trilogy, by Rick Atkinson | Official Website
Notes

Lawrence Rush "Rick" Atkinson IV (born November 16, 1952) is an American author who has won Pulitzer Prizes in history and journalism.

After working as a newspaper reporter, editor, and foreign correspondent for the Washington Post, Atkinson turned to writing military history. His six books include narrative accounts of four different American wars.

His Liberation Trilogy, a history of the American role in the liberation of Europe in World War II, concluded with the publication of The Guns at Last Light in May 2013. In 2010, he received the $100,000 Pritzker Military Library Literature Award for Lifetime Achievement in Military Writing.

Life and career

Atkinson was born in Munich to Margaret (née Howe) and Larry Atkinson, who was a U.S. Army officer. He grew up on military posts around the world, including stints in Salzburg, Georgia, Idaho, Pennsylvania, California, Hawaii, Kansas, and Virginia.[citation needed] Turning down an appointment to West Point,[2] he instead attended East Carolina University on a full scholarship, graduating with a bachelor of arts degree in English in 1974. He received a master of arts degree in English language and literature from the University of Chicago in 1975.[citation needed]

While visiting his parents for Christmas at Fort Riley, Kansas, in 1975, Atkinson found a job as a newspaper reporter for The Morning Sun in Pittsburg, Kansas, covering crime, local government, and other topics in southeast Kansas, an area known as “the Little Balkans” for its ethnic diversity and fractious politics. In April 1977, he joined the staff of The Kansas City Times, working nights in suburban Johnson County, Kansas, before moving to the city desk and eventually serving as a national reporter; in 1981, he joined the newspaper's bureau in Washington, D.C. He won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1982[1] for a "body of work" that included a series about the West Point class of 1966, which lost more men in Vietnam than any other Military Academy class. He also contributed to the newspaper's coverage of the Hyatt Regency walkway collapse in Kansas City, Missouri, for which the paper's staff in 1982 was awarded a Pulitzer Prize for local spot news reporting.

In November 1983, Atkinson was hired as a reporter on the national staff of the Washington Post. He subsequently wrote about defense issues, the 1984 presidential election–he covered Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman vice-presidential candidate for a major party—and various national topics. In 1985, he became deputy national editor, overseeing coverage of defense, diplomacy, and intelligence. In 1988, he returned to reporting on the Post's investigative staff, writing about topics as varied as public housing in the District of Columbia and the secret history of Project Senior C.J., which became the B-2 stealth bomber. In 1991, he was the newspaper's lead writer during the Persian Gulf War. Two years later he joined the foreign staff as bureau chief in Berlin, covering not only Germany and NATO, but also spending considerable time in Somalia and Bosnia. He returned from Europe in 1996 to become assistant managing editor for investigations; in that role, he headed a seven-member team that for more than a year scrutinized shootings by the District of Columbia police department, resulting in “Deadly Force,” a series for which the Post was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service.[citation needed]

Atkinson left the newspaper world in 1999 to write about World War II, a consuming interest that began with his birth in Germany and was rekindled during his three-year tour in Berlin. Subsequently he twice rejoined the Post for reporting forays, first in 2003, when for two months he accompanied General David Petraeus and the 101st Airborne Division during the invasion of Iraq, and again in 2007, when he made trips to Iraq and Afghanistan while writing “Left of Boom,” an investigative series about the proliferation of roadside bombs in modern warfare, which won the Gerald R. Ford Award for Distinguished Reporting on National Defense. He held the Omar N. Bradley Chair of Strategic Leadership at the United States Army War College and Dickinson College in 2004–2005, and remains an adjunct faculty member at the war college.[citation needed]

Works

Atkinson's first book, written while on leave from the Post, was The Long Gray Line: The American Journey of West Point’s Class of 1966. A 1989 review in Time magazine called it “brilliant history,” [3] and Business Week reviewer Dave Griffiths called it "the best book out of Vietnam to date."[1] Author James Salter, reviewing the book for The Washington Post Book World, wrote, “Enormously rich in detail and written with a novelist's brilliance, the pages literally hurry before one.”[citation needed] In 1993, Atkinson wrote Crusade: The Untold Story of the Persian Gulf War. In a review, The Wall Street Journal wrote, “No one could have been better prepared to write a book on Desert Storm, and Atkinson's Crusade does full justice to the opportunity.”[citation needed]

Publication of The Liberation Trilogy began in 2002 with An Army at Dawn: The War in North Africa, 1942–1943, acclaimed by the Wall Street Journal as “the best World War II battle narrative since Cornelius Ryan’s classics, The Longest Day and A Bridge Too Far.” While with the 101st Airborne Division south of Baghdad in April 2003, Atkinson learned that the book had been awarded the Pulitzer Prize for history. The trilogy's second volume, The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943–1944, published in 2007, drew praise from the New York Times as “a triumph of narrative history, elegantly written...and rooted in the sight and sounds of battle.” Volume three, The Guns at Last Light: The War in Western Europe, 1944–1945, was published by Henry Holt and Co. in May 2013, and was ranked #1 on the New York Times Hardcover Nonfiction[4] and Combined Print & E-Book Nonfiction[5][6] bestseller lists. A review in the New York Times called the book "a tapestry of fabulous richness and complexity...Atkinson is a master of what might be called 'pointillism history,' assembling the small dots of pure color into a vivid, tumbling narrative...The Liberation Trilogy is a monument achievement."[citation needed]

As a result of his time with Gen. Petraeus and the 101st Airborne, Atkinson also wrote In the Company of Soldiers: A Chronicle of Combat, which The New York Times Book Review called “intimate, vivid, and well-informed,” and which Newsweek cited as one of the ten best books of 2004. Atkinson was the lead essayist in Where Valor Rests: Arlington National Cemetery, published by the National Geographic Society in 2007.[citation needed]

In 2013 Mr. Atkinson was working on a trilogy about the American Revolution 1775-1781, to be edited by John Sterling.[5]

Awards

Family

While working in Kansas City, Atkinson met Jane Ann Chestnut of Lawrence, Kansas, then a first-year dental student. They married in 1979. Dr. Atkinson is currently the director of the Center for Clinical Research at the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research within the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. The Atkinsons live in Washington, D.C., and have two children, Rush (born in 1983), currently a criminal trial attorney for the Justice Department, and Sarah (born 1985), a surgical resident at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.

Bibliography

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  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (Liberation Trilogy #1)[10] (2003 Pulitzer Prize for History)
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  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (Liberation Trilogy #3)[14]
  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (The Young Readers Adaptation of The Guns of Last Light)[15]
  • Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (The Young Readers Adaptation of The Guns at Last Light)[16]

Notes and references

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External links

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