Thomas W. Lippman is a DC-based author and journalist who has specialized in Middle Eastern affairs and American foreign policy for more than three decades. As a foreign correspondent of the Washington Post, he covered wars in Vietnam, Cambodia, Lebanon, and Somalia. The author of nine books, including most recently Crude Oil, Crude Money: Aristotle Onassis, Saudi Arabia, and the CIA, Lippman won the 2009 Benjamin Franklin Award for biography from the Independent Book Publishers Association for his profile of another unsung hero, USMC Colonel Bill Eddy.
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Introduction1. From Small Town to Gotham2. Homer Bigart Goes to War3. The Italian Campaign4. The Pacific and the Bomb5. Cold War, Tough Calls6. Conflicts in Greece7. Two Wars in Korea8. The Red Menace, at Home and Abroad9. Leaving the Sinking Ship10. Cuba, Congo, and Cannibals11. Reality Check in Vietnam12. The Great Strike and a New Alice13. Civil Rights, in Many Forms14. The Long Roads EndEpilogue: What Would Homer Do?NotesBibliographyIndex