Richard S. Lambert
English biographer, popular historian and broadcaster (1894–1981) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Richard Stanton Lambert (25 August 1894 – 27 November 1981) was a biographer, popular historian and broadcaster. He was also the founding editor of The Listener and an employee of the BBC and CBC. His books mainly concern history and biography but he also wrote about crime, travel, art, radio, film and propaganda. In Ariel and All His Quality he wrote about his time with the BBC in its formative years. Propaganda, published in 1939, was a timely investigation of a subject already made familiar during World War I.
Richard Stanton Lambert | |
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Born | (1894-08-25)25 August 1894 Kingston upon Thames, southwest London, England |
Died | 27 November 1981(1981-11-27) (aged 87) Victoria, British Columbia, Canada |
Occupation(s) | Biographer, broadcaster, historian, psychical researcher |
For Franklin of the Arctic: a life of adventure, published by McClelland and Stewart in 1949, Lambert won both the first Governor General's Award for Juvenile Fiction and the third Canadian Library Association Book of the Year for Children Award.[1][2]