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Learn moreWilliam L. Laurence was fascinated with atomic science and its militarization. When the Manhattan Project drew near to perfecting the atomic bomb, he was recruited to write much of the government's press materials that were distributed on the day that Hiroshima was obliterated. That instantly crowned Laurence as one of the leading journalistic experts on the atomic bomb. As the Cold War dawned, some assessed Laurence as a propagandist defending the militarization of atomic energy. For others, he was a skilled science communicator who provided the public with an understanding of the atomic bomb.
Laurence leveraged his perch at the Times to engage in paid speechmaking, book writing, filmmaking, and radio broadcasting. His work for the Times declined in quality as his relationships with people in power grew closer and more lucrative. Atomic Bill reveals extraordinary ethical lapses by Laurence. In 1963, a conflict of interest led to his forced retirement from the Times.
Kiernan shows Laurence to have set the trend, common among today's journalists of science and technology, to prioritize gee-whiz coverage of discoveries. That approach, in which Laurence served the interests of governmental official and scientists, recommends a revision of our understanding of the dawn of the atomic era.
Vincent Kiernan is the dean of the Metropolitan School of Professional Studies at the Catholic University of America in Washington DC. He is the author of several books, including Embargoed Science.
Jim Frangione has narrated over 350 audiobooks, including all of J. R. Ward's Black Dagger Brotherhood series. Other favorites: The Chet and Bernie Mysteries, by Spencer Quinn, Dennis Lehane's Live By Night, The Drop, and World Gone By; Anton Chekhov's Fifty-Two Stories, translated by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky, Ben Tarnoff's The Bohemians, and most recently Philip Caputo's The Voyage. He's received over a dozen AudioFile Earphones Awards and was named one of Audible's Best Voices of 2016. He has narrated five books that AudioFile magazine selected as the Best Audiobooks of the Year: World Gone By (2015), Dark Carousel (2016), The Chosen and Lucy and Desi (both 2017), and J. R. Ward's The Sinner (2020). Jim is artistic director of Great Barrington Public Theater, a professional summer theater that develops and produces new plays for the stage.