Quentin Reynolds - Books

Books

  • The Wounded Don't Cry, E P Dutton, 1941
  • A London Diary, Angus & Robertson, 1941
  • Convoy, Random House, 1942
  • Only the Stars are Neutral, Random House, 1942; Blue Ribbon Books, 1943
  • Dress Rehearsal: The Story of Dieppe, Random House, 1943
  • The Curtain Rises, Random House, 1944
  • Officially Dead: The Story of Commander C D Smith, USN; The Prisoner the Japs Couldn’t Hold No. 511 Random House, 1945 (Published by Pyramid Books under the title He Came Back in multiple printings in the 1960s and early 1970s.)
  • 70,000 to 1 (Seventy Thousand to One); True War Adventure, 1946
  • The Wright Brothers, Pioneers of American Aviation, Random House Landmark Books, 1950
  • Courtroom; The Story of Samuel S Leibowitz, Farrar, Straus and Co, 1950
  • Custer's Last Stand, Random House, 1951
  • The Battle of Britain, Random House, 1953
  • The Amazing Mr Doolittle; A Biography of Lieutenant General James H Doolittle, Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1953
  • The Man Who Wouldn't Talk, 1953
  • I, Willie Sutton, Farrar, Straus and Young, 1953
  • The FBI, Random House Landmark Books, 1954
  • Headquarters, Harper & Brothers, 1955
  • The Fiction Factory; or, From Pulp Row to Quality Street; The Story of 100 years of Publishing at Street & Smith, Random House 1955
  • They Fought for the Sky; The Dramatic Story of the First War in the Air, Rinehart & Company, 1957
  • Minister of Death: The Adolf Eichmann Story (by Zwy Aldouby and Quentin James Reynolds), Viking 1960
  • Known But to God; The Story of the “Unknowns” of America’s War Memorials, John Day 1960
  • Winston Churchill, Random House 1963
  • By Quentin Reynolds, McGraw Hill, 1963
  • Britain Can Take It! (based on the film)
  • Don't Think It Hasn't Been Fun
  • The Life of Saint Patrick
  • Macapagal, the Incorruptible
  • A Secret for Two
  • With Fire and Sword; Great War Adventures

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    Leo Tolstoy (1828–1910)

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    When I am dead, I hope it may be said:
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