Richard F. Snow (born 1947) is an American historian and writer of novels and short stories.
Snow is the author of the 1981 novel, The Burning, a fictionalized account of the Hinckley, Minnesota, fire of 1894. His other works include The Funny Road (1975) and The Iron Road (1979), which was a Boston Globe–Horn Book Award Honor book in 1979.[1]
Snow graduated from Columbia University in 1970 and began working at American Heritage Magazine.[2] Succeeding Byron Dobell, he served as the editor from 1990 to 2007.[3]
After the magazine closed, he returned to writing full-time, penning A Measureless Peril: America in the Fight for the Atlantic, the Longest Battle of World War II, about America’s role in the Battle of the Atlantic during World War II (Scribner, 2011) and I Invented the Modern Age: The Rise of Henry Ford, a biography of Henry Ford (2014).[4] In 2016, he published Iron Dawn: The Monitor, the Merrimack, and the Civil War Sea Battle that Changed History which won that years Samuel Eliot Morison Award for Naval Literature.[5] In 2019 he published the story of Walt Disney's invention of the amusement park, Disney's Land.[6]