Edward Latimer Beach
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[b]Edward Latimer Beach, Jr.[/b] (April 20, 1918 - December 01, 2002) was a highly-decorated United States Navy submarine officer and best-selling author. During World War II, he participated in the Battle of Midway and 12 combat patrols, earning 10 decorations for gallantry, including the Navy Cross. After the war, he served as the naval aide to the President of the United States and commanded the first submerged circumnavigation. After World War II, Beach wrote extensively in his spare time following in the footsteps of his father, who was also a career naval officer and author. His first book [i]Submarine![/i] (1952) was a compilation of accounts of several wartime patrols made by his own as well as other submarines. In all, Beach published thirteen books, but is best known for his first novel, [i]Run Silent, Run Deep[/i] (1955), which appeared on The New York Times Book Review bestseller list for several months. A movie of the same name, based loosely on the novel and starring Clark Gable and Burt Lancaster, was released by United Artists in 1958. Beach penned two sequels to [i]Run Silent, Run Deep[/i]: [i]Dust on the Sea[/i] (1972), relating in detail a war patrol by Eel leading a wolfpack, and [i]Cold is the Sea[/i] (1978), set in 1961 aboard a nuclear submarine. In addition to Submarine!, Beach wrote several more books on naval history, including [i]The Wreck of the Memphis[/i] (1966); [i]United States Navy: 200 Years[/i] (1986), a general history of the Navy; [i]Scapegoats: A Defense of Kimmel and Short at Pearl Harbor[/i] (1995); and [i]Salt and Steel: Reflections of a Submariner[/i] (1999). [i]Keepers of the Sea[/i] (1983) is a pictorial record of the modern navy with photography by Fred J. Maroon. For a number of years Beach was co-editor of Naval Terms Dictionary as that standard reference work passed through several editions. His last work, completed shortly before his death, was to prepare for publication his father's manuscript of his own distinguished service in the navy. That book, [i]From Annapolis to Scapa Flow: The Autobiography of Edward L. Beach, Sr[/i] (2003), is Captain Beach, Sr.'s personal account of the navy from the age of sail to the age of steam. In addition to his books, Beach was a prolific author of articles and book reviews for periodicals ranging from Blue Book Magazine to National Geographic, and Naval History to American Heritage.