About the author
A former linguist with the National Security Agency in West Berlin during the Cold War, Keith Gave covered the National Hockey League for nearly 30 years. He spent 15 years with the Detroit Free Press, preceded by three years at the Chicago Bureau of the Associated Press and followed by four years in Dallas, with the Morning News. He won numerous awards for his work in Detroit and Dallas, including national recognition for investigative reporting out of Russia – work that formed the basis for his first book, "The Russian Five, A Story of Espionage, Defection, Bribery and Courage" (2018). He was on the AP staff in Chicago that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the Tylenol-cyanide murders in 1982. And his editors at the Dallas Morning News nominated him for a Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 1999. Gave left the newspaper industry in a career change in 2001 to teach college English and to advise journalism students, several of whom are prospering in the news industry. At the age of 65, he returned to the classroom to earn his MFA while writing "The Russian Five" and working on the documentary of the same name that won multiple audience awards. The book was also translated into Russian and Slovakian. It was a best-seller in Russia as well. His other books include "Vlad The Impaler, More epic tales from Detroit's '97 Stanley Cup Conquest" (2021), essentially a sequel to his first book, and "A Miracle Of Their Own, A team, a stunning gold medal and newfound dreams for American girls" (2022). He lives in northern Michigan with his wife, Jo Ann, trying to keep up with their three golden retrievers – Conroy, Dante and Garp.