Thomas Hager

  Home   My Works   Biography   Events   Reviews   Media    

Biography

I have written or edited five books (a sixth is currently in production): Aging Well (with Lauren Kessler, Facts on File, 1987; Fireside Press, 1990; Italian and Chinese editions); Force of Nature: The Life of Linus Pauling (Simon & Schuster 1995, audiobook 1996); Linus Pauling and the Chemistry of Life (Oxford University Press 1998, paperback 2000, Korean and Japanese editions); Linus Pauling: Scientist and Peacemaker (ed. with Clifford Mead, Oregon State University Press 2001, paperback 2008, Chinese edition in press); and The Demon under the Microscope (Harmony/Crown 2006, paperback 2007, e-book, audio book, book club editions). My sixth book, The Alchemy of Air a history of what is arguably the most important discovery of the twentieth century, will be out in 2008.

I was raised in and around Portland Oregon. After earning a master's degree in medical microbiology and immunology -- then another in journalism -- I started my professional career as a communications intern at the National Cancer Institute. I worked as a freelance medical writer, a contributor to American Health, and West Coast news correspondent for the Journal of the American Medical Association, before moving into editing and publishing. I was founding editor of a scientific trade publication, then edited Oregon Quarterly, the oldest and largest-circulation magazine in the state, for ten years. I worked some years as director of communications and marketing at the University of Oregon, during which time I restarted the University of Oregon Press. During this period of my career, my wife gave me a framed cartoon of an old man on his deathbed delivering some last words of wisdom to his boy: "Promise me, son, that you'll never have anything to do with book publishing."

More than 100 of my articles on medicine and science have been published in periodicals ranging from Readers Digest, Self, and the Wall St. Journal to Cardio and the Medical Tribune.

I have appeared on C-Span's "BookTV," and been interviewed on NPR shows like "Weekend Edition," "Science Friday," and "Talk of the Nation." I enjoy public speaking and have given talks before the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and many other groups ranging from reading groups to event keynotes, university classes, medical associations, scientific gatherings, health organizations, charitable giving efforts, alumni events, and peace groups.

I've done my share of web work as well, writing the text for several Linus Pauling websites and acting as a consultant for the National Library of Medicine.

I am lucky enough to live in the hills near Eugene, Oregon, with my wife Lauren Kessler. We have three children: Jackson, Zane, and Elizabeth.


With Linus Pauling.

In Bookstores

The Demon under the Microscope
Modern medicine was born in the early 1930s, when a dedicated doctor in Nazi-era Germany used patience, brains, and a completely mistaken idea to discover the world's first miracle drug. "A grand story," Wall St. Journal. "Surprisingly entertaining," Entertainment Weekly. "Remarkable," Publishers Weekly. "Fascinating," Kirkus Reviews (starred).



Find Authors

Created by The Authors Guild

A note for users of older versions of Internet Explorer, Netscape, or AOL:
This site will look a lot better in a newer browser. Download one for free!
Internet Explorer: Windows Mac   |   Netscape: Windows Mac Other
For AOL users, please choose Internet Explorer above.