From the Inside Flap:
Dear Bryan, When your novel, November 22, first came out, I read it with great interest. Just recently, though, I picked it up again, and in rereading it I am even more impressed with the book than I was originally. I think your approach to establishing the different points of view in the community on that fateful day is a wonderful technique. I think it really tells the story of what Dallas was like better than any of the nonfiction books of the time. With best regards, Stanley Marcus July 16, 1984
About the Author:
Bryan Woolley began his writing career on the staff of the El Paso Times when he was still a teenager. After earning degrees at the University of Texas at El Paso, Texas Christian University, and Harvard, he served as an Associated Press correspondent in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and then as city editor of the Anniston Star in Alabama. In 1969 he joined the Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky. In 1976 he moved to the Dallas Times Herald, and in 1989 to the Dallas Morning News, where he worked until his retirement in 2006. He lives in Dallas with his wife, the poet Isabel Nathaniel.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.