James Zug
Books By James Zug
Run to the Roar
By James Zug
Run to the Roar, published by Penguin in November 2010, is a book for parents and coaches who want to learn how to mentor the young athletes in their lives.
The Long Conversation
By James Zug
In September 1883 Thomas Sidwell opened a new school in a back room in Washington, DC’s Quaker meetinghouse. In the next one hundred and twenty-five years, Sidwell Friends School carved
The Guardian
By James Zug
The sole national anti-apartheid newspaper in South Africa, the Guardian not only reported on the liberation struggle but led it. Reporting on strikes, repression and political manuevering, the Guardian had great journalists on its
American Traveler
By James Zug
Called “a man of genius,” by Thomas Jefferson, John Ledyard was the first great American explorer. Ledyard (1751-1789) was a native of Groton, Connecticut. He fled Dartmouth College by canoe
The Last Voyage of Captain Cook
By James Zug
The first time all of Ledyard’s writings have been published together, The Last Voyage of Captain Cook was published in March 2005 by the National Geographic Society. It contains his 1783 memoir of
The Preserve: A Centennial History 1904-2004
By James Zug
The Preserve: A Centennial History 1904-2004 was privately published in a 2,000-copy edition in August 2004. Professionally designed, it is a 312-page, four-color, coffee-table book, with hundreds of archival photographs, endnotes,
Squash: A History of the Game
By James Zug
Published by Scribner in September 2003, Squash has a foreword written by the late George Plimpton. The first history of the game in the United States, Squash incorporated every aspect of the popular sport.