Ken Cuthbertson
Kenneth James Cuthbertson (born May 7, 1951) is a Canadian author who has written and edited several books. He was the editor of the Queen's Alumni Review magazine. Early life and educationCuthbertson was born in Kingston, Ontario. He studied modern American history at Queen's University in Kingston, graduating with an Honors BA in 1974 and then earned a Master of Arts degree at Western University in London, Ontario, in 1975. After working as a journalist for five years, he returned to university and graduated from Queen's Law with his JD degree in 1983.[citation needed] Journalism careerAfter university education, Cuthbertson worked at a metropolitan Toronto weekly newspaper in Scarborough, The Regina Leader Post, The London Free Press, and The Kingston Whig-Standard, the latter while attending law school at Queen's University. In 1986, he took a job with the Queen's Alumni Review magazine, serving for one year as assistant editor for one year and then as editor from 1987-2014.[1] From 1981-82, he served as the Kingston correspondent for CBC Radio, Ottawa. WorksCuthbertson wrote Inside: The Biography of John Gunther and was published in 1992. The book was shortlisted for the 1992 Governor General's Awards.[2] It was followed by Nobody Said Not to Go published by Faber and Faber in 1998, and was a biography of New Yorker journalist Emily Hahn. He also wrote The Memoirs of the Henry E. MacFutter: The Ring of Truth (2014) and was published by Quarry Heritage Book. Following his 2014 retirement from Queen's, Cuthbertson wrote a biography titled A Complex Fate: William L. Shirer and the American Century, which was published by the McGill-Queen's University Press. In 2017, Cuthbertson's book, The Halifax Explosion: Canada's Worst Disaster (HarperCollins Canada) was shortlisted for an Atlantic Book Award.[3] In 2020, he published 1945: The Year That Made Modern Canada (HarperCollins Canada), and Blood on the Coal: The True Story of the Great Springhill Mine Disaster (2023) published by HarperCollins Canada, and was Canadian bestseller book.[4] It was also among the 100 Best Books in 2023 by The Globe and Mail.[5] Bibliography
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