HomeComplete CatalogContact UsEagle Publishing





[  Authors:   A-C    D-F    G-J    K-L    M-N    O-R    S    T-Z  ]
  

Mark W. Davis is the coauthor of Madame Hillary. As a White House speechwriter, he drafted the prime-time address before the U.S. Congress declaring President George H. W. Bush’s determination to evict Saddam Hussein’s forces from Kuwait. He has also served as a speechwriter to California governor Pete Wilson, served in the Republican National Committee during the Reagan years, and has advised many campaigns. Now a business consultant, he helped research Barbara Olson’s New York Times bestseller Hell to Pay, and is a frequent contributor to many national publications.

Kenneth E. DeGraffenreid, author of The Cox Report, is professor of Intelligence Studies at the Institute of World Politics. He served in the Reagan White House as senior director of intelligence programs at the National Security Council. He also served on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.

Deke DeLoach, author of Hoover’s FBI, served as an FBI agent for more than twenty-eight years. He rose from field agent to deputy director—a position he kept until retiring from the Bureau in 1970—putting him third in line in the FBI hierarchy. After his service in the FBI, DeLoach served as vice president of PepsiCo for fifteen years. Following the death of Director Hoover, DeLoach was twice offered the directorship of the Bureau but chose to stay in corporate life. He currently lives on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, and serves as chairman of a mortgage banking company.

Lieutenant General Mike DeLong, USMC (retired), author of Inside CentCom, capped a distinguished thirty-six-year military career as deputy commander of United States Central Command. He is a graduate of the Naval Academy and a much-decorated veteran of the Vietnam War, the 1991 Gulf War, and other military actions. Gen. DeLong lives in Florida, where he is corporate vice president of Global Planning and Operations for the Shaw Group.

Ralph de Toledano, author and journalist, was formerly assistant chief of the Washington Bureau of Newsweek magazine. His coverage of the Hiss trial ultimately led him to write the 1950 bestseller Seeds of Treason. He is the author of numerous other books, including Spies, Dupes, and Diplomats and One Man Alone: Richard Nixon. His articles have appeared in The Washington Times, Reader’s Digest, National Review, and Chronicles, among others. He lives in Washington, DC.

Wade Dokken, author of New Century, New Deal: How To Turn Your Wages Into Wealth Through Social Security Choice, is president and chief executive officer of American Skandia, Inc., one of the fastest growing financial services companies in the United States. He lives with his wife and three sons in Weston, Connecticut.

Dinesh D’Souza, author of What’s So Great About America, a former White House domestic policy analyst, is currently the Rishwain Research Scholar at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. He is the bestselling author of Illiberal Education, The End of Racism, Ronald Reagan: How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader, and The Virtue of Prosperity. His website is www.dineshdsouza.com. He can be reached by email at: thedsouzas@aol.com.

Charlie Daniels, author of Ain’t No Rag, has recorded six platinum albums over his four-decade career, playing a combination of country, Southern rock, gospel, and rhythm & blues that can only be characterized as Charlie Daniels Band music. He has performed for U.S. troops all over the world and was honored by two U.S. presidents after he won the Pioneer Award from the Academy of Country Music in 1998. Born in Wilimington, North Carolina, Daniels and his wife, Hazel, live in Mt. Juliet, Tennessee.

Johnny Dodd, coauthor of Higher Purpose, has been on staff at People magazine since 1994. His writing has also appeared in Bike, Powder, Outside, the Los Angeles Times, and the Seattle Weekly. In 1995 he competed in the first Eco-Challenge endurance race.

Lee Edwards, author of Goldwater, is a senior editor at The World and I, a monthly magazine of politics and culture. He is an adjunct professor of politics at Catholic University and sits as a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation, Washington’s preeminent think tank. He is the author of eleven books, including The Conservative Revolution: The Movement That Remade America. He and his wife have two daughters and four grandchildren and reside in Virginia.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, author of The Secret Life of Bill Clinton, has built a stellar career as a journalist. He covered Central America for The Economist and The Daily Telegraph and has reported from the United States for both The Spectator and The Sunday Telegraph, for which he was Washington bureau chief. Cambridge-educated and internationally renowned, Evans-Pritchard has reluctantly returned to England, where he will serve as The Daily Telegraph’s roving European correspondent.

Michael Farris founded the Home School Legal Defense Association in 1983. An attorney, ordained Baptist minister, and former nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Virginia, he is a frequent commentator on national news networks. He and his wife home school their six daughters and four sons in Paeonian Springs, Virginia.

Don Feder, author of Who’s Afraid of the Religious Right?, has been a columnist and editorial writer for the Boston Herald for twelve years and is syndicated in forty newspapers nationwide. Prior to writing for the Herald, Feder practiced law in New York state, was editorial director of WEEI newsradio, and executive director of both the Second Amendment Foundation and Citizens for a Limited Taxation. Also the author of A Jewish Conservative Looks at pagan America, he lives with his family near Boston.

Randall Fitzgerald, author of Mugged by the State, was a Reader’s Digest contributing editor for twenty years and is now a full-time freelance writer. His articles have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Capitol Hill News, Houston Post, and other publications.

Steve Forbes, author of The New Birth of Freedom, is a successful chief executive, publisher, influential writer and speaker on domestic and foreign policy issues, as well as a devoted husband and father. Mr. Forbes is President and Chief Executive Officer of Forbes, Inc., as well as Editor-in-Chief of Forbes, the nation’s leading business magazine. In 1985 President Reagan named Mr. Forbes Chairman of the bipartisan Board for International Broadcasting. He currently serves on the board of the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation, The American Enterprise Institute, and Empower America, a grassroots, political reform organization founded by Jack Kemp, Bill Bennett, and Jeane Kirkpatrick. He lives in Bedminster, New Jersey, with Sabina, his wife of 27 years and their five daughters.

 

Home - Inside Regnery - Hot New Releases - Complete Catalog
LifeLine Press - Capital Press - Eagle Publishing
Search - Contact Us - Site Map