
Also wrote under the pseudonym Paul Connolly. Thomas Grey Wicker’s respected talent as a journalist took him from his origins in Hamlet, North Carolina, to The New York Times. There he served as associate editor, former Washington bureau chief, as well as the author of the famous op-ed column “In the Nation” for thirty years. He was the author of a considerable number of acclaimed fiction and non-fiction books as well. Wicker earned his journalism degree from the University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill in 1948, and at first wrote for papers in Aberdeen and Lumberton. He wrote for the Winston-Salem Journal for eight years and The Nashville Tennessean for two years before heading up to the Times, where he eventually retired in 1991. Wicker’s famous report on the assassination of President Kennedy, written from the perspective of the motorcade following the president, has been praised as the most accurate firsthand account of the shooting.
Series
Books

Unto This Hour
1984

A Time to Die
1976

Dwight D. Eisenhower
2002

Facing the Lions
1973

Shooting Star
The Brief Arc of Joe McCarthy
2006

What If? 2
Eminent Historians Imagine What Might Have Been
2000

George Herbert Walker Bush
2004

One of Us
Richard Nixon and the American Dream
1991

JFK and LBJ
The Influence of Personality Upon Politics
1969

Prison Writings in 20th Century America
1998