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Author of more than 125 books of groundbreaking history and more than 200 works, both history books and articles.


Phillip Thomas Tucker

From an "American Historian" to "From a Prolific and Ground-breaking American Historian" and earned the reputation as "The Stephen King of History" and “America's Most Groundbreaking American Revolutionary War Historian”

From an "American Historian" to "From a Prolific and Ground-breaking American Historian" and earned the reputation as "The Stephen King of History" and “America's Most Groundbreaking American Revolutionary War Historian”

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Phillip Thomas Tucker, Ph.D. has won international recognition as "The Stephen King of History" and "America's Most Groundbreaking American Revolutionary War Historian".

Author of more than 130 books of groundbreaking history and more than 200 works, both books and articles, of history.


Book reading

Books From an American Historian

Award-winning, innovative author Phillip Thomas Tucker PhD illustrates a wide range of historical events including the Battle of Gettysburg and America’s war of independence.
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Books

About the Author

Learn more about an author who many say is a "new-look" historian, bringing a fresh perspective and new revelations while uncovering the truth about events throughout history.
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Hitler Orders The Death of Field Marshal Rommel
Anne Bonny's Adventures
Rommel's Wasted Opportunity To The Thwart The D-Day Invasion

Testimonials

"Phillip Thomas Tucker, Ph.D. is the Stephen King of History."

"Dr. Tucker is one of the two or three best 'idea persons' that I've met during my nearly twenty years as a professional military historian. He is a creative, innovative thinker, who has a gift for conceiving and outling original works in serious history. This is probably his longest suit as a professional historian . . . Phil Tucker is one of the most innovative, hardest working, and diligently productive historians of his generation."

"Dr. Tucker throughout his career has been interested in the relationships between wartime operations and ethnicity. His many works, spanning periods from the colonial era to the late twentieth century, explore this theme. What separates him from many other historians is that he is an innovative 'idea person.' I have known very few historians who can match his ability to conceive a topic, develop a fresh approach to it, and write about it at length."
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