About the Author:
James Leonard Delaney is a native Tennessean, but has resided, worked and paid taxes in 38 of the contiguous 48 states as a biologist, earth scientist, public affairs journalist and Air Force Reserve Officer. He holds degrees from the Universities of Montana, Oklahoma and Vanderbilt. He is a resident graduate of the National War College, Washington, DC, and the Air War College, Montgomery, Alabama. He served as a contributing researcher with the US Army Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, and the US Fish and Wildlife Service. His global
travel has been extensive and unaccompanied.
Except for graduate theses (and mongraphs published by the Government Printing Office), this is his first volume.
travel has been extensive and unaccompanied.
Except for graduate theses (and mongraphs published by the Government Printing Office), this is his first volume.
About the Book:
Now & Then - 20th Century Change in America
2006 Edition; Perfect bound; 166 pages; 5.5 x 8.5 inches
ISBN: 0-9776207-2-7 $14.95
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Now & Then ...is far more than a simple chronicle of events in one man's life. It is a series of observations based on a richness of life experiences; scientific, military, and as an American citizen, that define attributes that have made our Nation great, but that also call into question some of the mundane idiosyncracies of our society that are a constant pull towards mediocrity. Don’t pick up this book for entertainment, for, although it rejoices in America’s cultural and environmental diversity, the author says, “If entertaining, it was not meant to be, for it surfaces America’s problems, yes, nightmares ignored by a plastic, mainstream, Orwellian media.”
2006 Edition; Perfect bound; 166 pages; 5.5 x 8.5 inches
ISBN: 0-9776207-2-7 $14.95
BUY NOW
Now & Then ...is far more than a simple chronicle of events in one man's life. It is a series of observations based on a richness of life experiences; scientific, military, and as an American citizen, that define attributes that have made our Nation great, but that also call into question some of the mundane idiosyncracies of our society that are a constant pull towards mediocrity. Don’t pick up this book for entertainment, for, although it rejoices in America’s cultural and environmental diversity, the author says, “If entertaining, it was not meant to be, for it surfaces America’s problems, yes, nightmares ignored by a plastic, mainstream, Orwellian media.”