Doug Stanton
- ️Fri May 27 2022
Doug Stanton has appeared as an USS Indianapolis historian on PBS’s 2017 “USS Indianapolis–From The Deep,” The Today Show, CNN, Fox, Morning Joe, NBC Nightly News, CBS This Morning, C-SPAN Book TV, History, A&E, Smithsonian Channel, Discovery, and in hundreds of national radio and print interviews.
In Harm’s Way spent more than six months on the New York Times bestseller list and has been translated in multiple languages. In 2017, the unabridged audiobook edition was the winner of an Audie Award in the History category.The book is read in U.S. highs schools as part of History and English/Creative Writing coursework and is a popular choice of book clubs nationwide.
His writing about the USS Indianapolis has appeared in Naval History magazine and other national publications. In Harm’s Way was included in the U.S. Navy’s required reading list for naval officers.
In Harm’s Way was a Publisher’s Weekly “Notable Book," a Michigan Notable Book of the Year, a Barnes & Noble and Amazon.com Notable/Best Book of The Year, and appeared on multiple bestseller lists: The New York Times, Publisher’s Weekly, Los Angeles Times, Detroit Free Press, Washington Post, USA TODAY, Christian Science Monitor, Entertainment Weekly, Publisher’s Weekly, Wall Street Journal, Chicago Tribune, The Sunday Times (London), and Book Sense.
As chronicled in In Harm’s Way, in July 2001, the Department of Navy, joining with the United States Congress, exonerated the ship’s court-martialed captain, Charles McVay. This historic reversal of fortune was preceded by a decades-long journey by USS Indianapolis survivors and families, friends, and interested parties from across the US, seeking justice for McVay and their ship’s legacy. As survivor Giles McCoy told Doug Stanton, he and his shipmates had promised McVay that they would “clear the skipper’s name.” McCoy, founder of the USS Indianapolis Survivors’ organization, and his shipmates made further good on this promise with the dedication of the USS Indianapolis National Memorial, in August, 1995.
After the publication of In Harm’s Way, Doug and Anne Stanton established “The USS Indianapolis Survivor’s Fund Scholarship Program,” administered by the Grand Traverse Regional Foundation, and later generously endowed, in memory of rescue pilot of Chuck Gwinn, as “The USS Indianapolis/Gwinn 'Angel' Scholarship Endowment” by the Gwinn family. Doug and Anne also provided the initial donation supporting publication of USS Indianapolis Survivors' oral histories. '