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67 Shots
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About the Author

Howard Means is the author or coauthor of ten books, including the first biography of Colin Powell and Louis Freeh's bestselling memoir My FBI. He has collaborated on dozens of titles, including bestsellers by Robert Baer (See No Evil, Sleeping with the Devil), George Tenet (At the Center of the Storm), and David Wessel (In Fed We Trust, Red Ink). A former syndicated columnist (King Features), Means was senior editor at Washingtonian magazine from 1989-2000. He lives in rural Virginia.

Reviews

Praise for 67 Shots "In Howard Means' fine hands, we discern how the terrible events at Kent State unfolded--relentlessly, ineluctably--like a Greek tragedy. Through dogged and imaginative reporting, 67 Shots shows us how the tragedy fed into, and was fed by, the larger maelstrom of the times. In this definitive account, Means has deftly extracted Kent State from the amber and exposed it to fresh air once again."--Hampton Sides, author of In the Kingdom of Ice and Hellhound On His Trail "Howard Means does a marvelous job of weaving together the many strands of memory and the records of the times to create a nuanced portrayal of a moment in American history too often reduced to the lyrics of a Neil Young song. This balanced account does justice to the perspectives of students, National Guardsmen, campus administrators, and local residents alike, both for and against the demonstrations."--Kenneth Hammond, Chairman, Department of History, New Mexico State University, and Kent State student-protest leader (1970) San Francisco Book Review, 4/4/16 "Howard Means' look at a horrible moment in US history is crucial to understanding the law, politics, basic rights and how occasionally all three clash, and how the former fail the latter." Library Journal, 4/15/16 "An intimate look at a tragedy that could not be predicted but was perhaps inevitable." Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, 4/22/16 "Means draws upon scores of interviews and a rich archival record to dispel numerous myths that have grown up around the events culminating on May 4, 1970, with four dead in Ohio." Columbus Dispatch, 4/24/16 "67 Shots is indispensable in understanding the sine-wave pattern of tension that began on the streets of Kent three nights before National Guardsmen fired on protesters." Washington Independent Review of Books, 4/26/16 "A fresh look at an era-defining U.S. tragedy." Christian Science Monitor, 5/10/16 "This isn't history writing at a distance. Means interviewed many of the players, major and minor, in this tragedy. Their personal stories give 67 Shots a deeply human feel and turn it into one of the most heartbreaking books in memory." PopMatters, 5/18/16 "Means weaves a precise and comprehensive narrative that paints an accurate and balanced retelling of events." Providence Journal, 6/2/16 "Means manages to grab Kent State from the murky recesses of our national memory. In so doing, he shows how the Vietnam War affected everything about our own sense of ourselves." "[Howard] Means provides the most careful examination of the tragedy that beset Kent State University and the US on May 4, 1970." ?Choice, December 2016

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