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Thomas Gallagher (1918 – December 19, 1992) was an American writer and seaman known for his writing on disasters and military heroism. He won a Edgar Award in 1960 and was a National Book Award for Fiction finalist in 1953.
Dec 21, 1992 · Thomas Gallagher, a writer whose painstaking research informed nonfiction on great disasters and military heroism and novels that probed the lost lives of bumbling, self-destructive people,...
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Thomas Gallagher may refer to: Politics. Thomas Gallagher (Illinois politician) (1850–1930), U.S. Representative from Illinois; Thomas Gallagher (mayor) (1883–1967), mayor of Pittsburgh; Tom Gallagher (born 1944), Florida politician; Tom Gallagher (Massachusetts politician), member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
Thomas Gallagher (1918-1992) was a widely published journalist and the author of eight books. His novel The Gathering Darkness (1952) was nominated for a National Book Award; his Fire at Sea: The Story of the Moro Castle (1959) won the Edgar Allan Poe Award for nonfiction.
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The Gathering Darkness. Bobbs-Merrill. The Gathering Darkness was Gallagher’s first novel. More about this book >. FICTION FINALIST National Book Awards 1953 >. Get This BOOK. Amazon.
Thomas Gallagher (1918-1992) was a writer whose painstaking research informed nonfiction on great disasters and military heroism and novels that probed the lost lives of bumbling, self-destructive people. After graduating from Columbia College in 1941, he served in Iran during World War II as a civilian attached to the Army Corps of Engineers.
Thomas Gerard Philip Gallagher (born 1954) is a Scottish political scientist. He taught politics at the University of Bradford until 2011 and is now Emeritus Professor of Politics at the university.