Robert clark author biography websites
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Dividing up Intelligence Education
Author Biography
Dr. Robert Clark is a professor at Henley-Putnam University where he teaches an advanced course in Intelligence Practicum. He began his career in the US Air Force as a B Electronics Warfare Officer and subsequently as an intelligence officer. He worked as an all-source analyst and group chief at CIA for a number of years, leaving to start a software development and technical analysis company that performed specialized work for the CIA, NSA, and NRO. Dr. Clark currently is a faculty member of the Intelligence Community Officers' Course, where he conducts an exercise on collection systems and analysis for IC mid-level managers, and facilitates case studies on intelligence estimates, covert action, and counterintelligence. He continues to perform space systems threat analyses for the National Reconnaissance Office and the CIA. He published Intelligence Analysis: Estimation and Prediction in His second book, Intelligence Anal
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Robert Clark is the author of the novels In the Deep Midwinter and Mr. White's Confession, and River of the West, a cultural history of the Columbia River (all Picador), and The Solace of Food, a biography of James Beard. A native of St. Paul, Minnesota, he lives in Seattle with his wife and two children.
Edgar Allan Poe Award Winner
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Sign up nowMy Grandfather's House
Robert Clark
Picador
Picador
Finalist, Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Biography
In the tradition of Augustine's Confessions, Robert Clark tells the story of his return to the Catholic
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BuyIn the Deep Midwinter
Robert Clark
Picador
Picador
November, In the aftermath of his brother James's death, Richard MacEwan's life is suddenly rocked by secrets involving his wife Sarah and daughter Anna. Among his bachelor br
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CLARK, ROBERT, merchant and colonizer; b. in London, England, son of Wotherton and Mary Clark; m. c. Elizabeth —; m. secondly 6 July Ann Berry in London; d. July or August , probably in St John’s (Prince Edward) Island.
Details of Robert Clark’s early life are unknown. He became a Quaker some time before and was active in the Society of Friends; in he was stated to have been a minister, or leader, for some years. He and his wife lived in Reading from to and in Faringdon from to , when they moved to London. After legal documents list his occupation as salesman or merchant. He purchased Lot 21 on St John’s Island in March and later added other lots, or townships, to his holdings. The next year he brought over settlers, many of them indentured servants, to the north shore of the island and founded the settlement of New London. There is some indication that he was motivated bygd religious enthusiasm. Governor Walter Patterson sta