Couched in careful terms, the letter stated that recent nuclear research indicated extremely powerful bombs of a new type, based on uranium, might soon be possible. On August 2, 1939, a month before World War II began in Europe, Albert Einstein signed a letter addressed to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. to midnight, August 6, 1945ĪFTERMATH: August 7 to midday, August 15, 1945 He also regularly provides expert analysis on intelligence for US and European television and radio programs. The Observer called The Spy Machine a “clear” picture of Israeli intelligence operations, and the Times called it “impressive” and ”chilling.”Ī member of the London Speaker Bureau and Macmillan Speakers, Thomas continues to grow his already-impressive platform, lecturing widely on the secret world of intelligence.
It was made into a major documentary for Channel 4 in Britain, which Thomas wrote and narrated, called The Spy Machine. Published in sixteen languages and forty countries, Gideon’s Spies is known throughout the world as the leading resource on Israeli intelligence. Thomas’s most recent bestseller is Gideon’s Spies: Mossad’s Secret Warriors. He has received numerous awards for his reporting, including an International Television Award and two Mark Twain Society Awards. Shipwreck won an Edgar Award.įour of Thomas’s books-Voyage of the Damned, Ruin from the Air, The Day the Bubble Burst, and The Day Their World Ended-have been made into feature films starring such A-listers as Paul Newman, Billy Crystal, Robert Vaughn, and Jacqueline Bisset. The Day Guernica Died is currently under option. He has recently appeared on Euronews (available in ten languages and three hundred million households) and Russia Today.
Thomas was the lead expert for a twelve-part series on international intelligence for Ian Punnett’s Coast to Coast, the most listened-to overnight radio broadcast in North America, with three million weekly listeners. He contributes regularly to Facta, a respected monthly Japanese news magazine. He has been a widely syndicated foreign correspondent and was a writer and producer for three flagship BBC programs: Man Alive, Tomorrow’s World, and Horizon. The total sales of his works exceed forty-five million copies. Gordon Thomas is a political and investigative journalist and the author of fifty-three books, published in more than thirty countries and in dozens of languages. Touching on the early days of the Manhattan Project and the first inkling of an atomic bomb, investigative journalist Gordon Thomas and his writing partner Max Morgan-Witts, take WWII enthusiasts through the training of the crew of the Enola Gay and the challenges faced by pilot Paul Tibbets.Ī page-turner that offers “minute-by-minute coverage of the critical periods” surrounding the mission, Enola Gay finally separates myth and reality from the planning of the flight to the moment over Hiroshima when the atomic age was born ( Library Journal).
From diplomatic moves behind the scenes to Japanese actions and the US Army Air Force’s call to action, no detail is left untold. Painstakingly researched, the story behind the decision to send the Enola Gay to bomb Hiroshima is told through firsthand sources. unrivaled” history of the B-29 and its fateful mission to drop the atomic bomb on Hiroshima ( The New York Times Book Review ). From the New York Times – bestselling coauthors: A “fascinating.