| About the Author
Citizens of London
Q&A
Troublesome Young Men Q&A
Lynne
Olson has been a reporter and writer since shortly after her graduation from
the University of Arizona. In 1971, she went to work for the Associated Press in
Salt Lake City, and in 1972, transferred to the AP’s San Francisco bureau, where
she specialized in feature writing. Later that same year, Olson was named to
AP’s top feature writing team in New York, which focused on developing and
writing stories about the country’s rapidly changing social mores. In 1973, she
was asked by the AP to become the wire service’s first woman correspondent in
Moscow, and she moved to the AP’s foreign desk to prepare for the assignment.
She was based in Moscow from 1974 to 1976, once again concentrating on feature
stories but also covering such news events as the Apollo-Soyuz space mission and
President Nixon’s visit to the Soviet Union. In 1976, Olson was reassigned to
Washington, where she was chosen to cover Jimmy Carter’s presidential campaign.
After Carter became president, Olson joined the
Washington bureau of the Baltimore Sun, where she covered national
politics and eventually the White House. In 1981, she quit the Sun to
become a freelance writer. She has written for such publications as the
Washington Post, American Heritage, Smithsonian, Working Woman, Los
Angeles Times Magazine, Ms., Elle, Glamour, Washington Journalism Review and
Baltimore Magazine. She also taught journalism for five years as an
assistant professor at American University in Washington.
Olson and her husband, Stanley Cloud, are
co-authors of The Murrow Boys, which was named one of the best books in
1996 by Publishers Weekly. Freedom’s Daughters, Olson’s second
book, is the first comprehensive history of women in the civil rights movement.
Published by Scribner in February 2001, it won a Christopher Award in 2002.
Olson joined with Cloud again to write A Question of Honor: The Kosciuszko
Squadron: Forgotten Heroes of World War II, published by Alfred A. Knopf in
September 2003.
Olson’s fourth book,
Troublesome Young Men: The Rebels Who Brought Churchill to Power and Helped Save
England, was published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in April 2007. Drawing
wide critical acclaim, it was named one of the top 10 books of 2007 by New
York Times book reviewer William Grimes and was a finalist for the Los
Angeles Book Prize in history.
Her latest book, Citizens
of London: The Americans Who Stood with Britain in Its Darkest, Finest Hour
was be published by Random House in February 2010. |