James Alexander Thom
For other uses, see Alexander Thom (disambiguation).
James Alexander Craig Thom (born May 26, 1933 in Gosport, Indiana) is an American author, best known for his works in the Western genre and colonial American history which are noted for their historical accuracy borne of his painstaking research. Thom graduated from Butler University in 1961 with a BA in Journalism after serving in the United States Marine Corps in the Korean Conflict. He taught a course in journalism at Indiana University, and was a contributor to The Saturday Evening Post.[1]
Works
- Let the Sun Shine In (a collection of short stories) (Gibson Publishing, 1976)
- Spectator Sport (a novel about the tragic events of the 1973 Indianapolis 500 auto race) (iUniverse, 1978)
- Staying Out of Hell (Ballantine Books, 1985)
- Long Knife (a novelized biography of General George Rogers Clark, Revolutionary War Hero, victor of the Battle of Fort Sackville in Vincennes, Indiana, and conqueror of the Northwest Territory) (Avon, 1979)
- From Sea to Shining Sea (a novelized biography based on the lives of the John and Ann Rogers Clark family, their 10 children which included brothers General George Rogers Clark, Revolutionary War Hero, and Captain William Clark of the Lewis and Clark expedition to the Pacific) (Villard Books, 1981)
- Panther in the Sky (a novelized biography of Tecumseh, the Shawnee Indian chieftain) (Ballantine Books, 1989)
- Follow the River (based on the Draper's Meadow massacre of 1755) (Ballantine Books, 1981)
- Red Heart (Random House, 1997)
- Sign Talker (a novelized biography of George Drouillard, who was with Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery expedition) (Ballantine Books, 2000)
- The Children of First Man (a novelization of the genesis and the demise of the Mandan Indian Tribe) (Fawcett, 1995)
- St. Patrick's Battalion (a novel about Saint Patrick's Battalion in the Mexican-American War of 1846) (Ballantine Books, 2006)
- Warrior Woman (with Dark Rain Thom, a novel about the life of Shawnee peace chief Nonhelema, born 1774) (Random House, 2007)
- The Art and Craft of Writing Historical Fiction (Writer’s Digest Books, 2010)
Film adaptations
- Follow the River (TV movie, 1995)
References
External links
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