Dexter Masters

Dexter Wright Masters (June 15, 1909 January 5, 1989), was an American editor and novelist who wrote extensively about the dangers of the atomic bomb.

Early life

Masters, a nephew of the poet Edgar Lee Masters, was born in Springfield, Illinois, and studied at the University of Chicago.

Early career

After working for Time and Fortune magazines, he became the first editor of Tide, a marketing trade journal, age 22. During the Second World War, Masters served on the communications staff of the US Air Force, worked with several research laboratories including the Radiation Laboratory at MIT, for which he edited Radar, a classified publication.

Book on the atomic bomb

Masters co-edited with nuclear physicist Katharine Way (1903-1995) the 1946 New York Times bestseller One World or None: a Report to the Public on the Full Meaning of the Atomic Bomb. The book included essays by Niels Bohr, Albert Einstein, and J. Robert Oppenheimer, and sold over 100,000 copies. In 1955, Masters published a novel, The Accident, detailing the last eight days of a nuclear physicist dying from radiation sickness after a criticality accident, based on the death of physicist Louis Slotin who died after such an accident in 1946. The novel was so controversial the US banned a movie version of it. A series of radio programs on the bomb earned Masters a Peabody Award in 1963.

On staff of Consumers Union

Shortly after its founding in 1936, Masters joined the staff of Consumers Union, publisher of the magazine Consumer Reports, where he headed a task force publicizing the dangers of cigarette smoking. In the late 1950s, he was instrumental in the organization's analysis of milk samples from around the country for radiation, thus making widely available for the first time information about the fallout dangers of atmospheric nuclear tests. He became director of Consumers Union in 1958, a position he held until 1963.[1]

Masters also contributed to the New Yorker, The Saturday Evening Post, the American Scholar, and other publications.

Personal life

Masters dated Mildred Edie Brady and later married her daughter, Joan Brady.[2] Their son Alexander Masters, is also a writer. He moved to Totnes, Devon, England in 1960, where he died in 1989.

gollark: Similarly to biological life stars run on internal feedback loops; if fusion produces less heat the radiation pressure keeping the outer layers up is reduced so the core contracts and more stuff can fuse.
gollark: Oxygen CAN fuse in stars, it just requires higher pressure and temperatures.
gollark: Although possibly the outer layers would be cast off and be larger and (OH NO) red.
gollark: Based on my very approximate knowledge of stellar dynamics, that would make it... contract and burn hotter.
gollark: To do what?

References

  1. Schonberg, Harold C. (January 6, 1989). "Dexter Masters, 80, British Editor; Warned of Perils of Atomic Age - New York Times". The New York Times. New York: NYTC. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  2. Brady, Joan (25 May 2012). "Why I stole my mother's lover". The Daily Telegraph. London: TMG. ISSN 0307-1235. OCLC 49632006. Retrieved 15 November 2012.
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