Joseph J. Di Certo
Joseph J. Di Certo
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Associated with The Nexus (Text Edition), part of Encyclopaedia Britannica's Publishing Partner Program.
BIOGRAPHY

Joseph J. Di Certo is the author of ten books and composer of three albums of children's songs. He worked as a technical writer on the Atlas, Minuteman, and Titan missile-launching systems, as well as on the atomic submarine programs. He was also the Director of World Wide Communications for the CBS Television Network.

His books include The Saga of the Pony Express (Mountain Press Publishing, 2002) as well as The Pony Express: Hoofbeats in the Wilderness (1988), The Electric Wishing Well: The Solution to the Energy Crisis (1976), and others.

Primary Contributions (7)
Wild Bill Hickok
Wild Bill Hickok was an American frontiersman, army scout, and lawman who helped bring order to the frontier West. His reputation as a gunfighter gave rise to legends and tales about his life. He was one of the early “heroes of the West” popularized in the dime novels of the late 19th and early…
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Publications (3)
Time Out
Time Out (2011)
By Joseph J. Di Certo
An unusually bold analysis of the question of time as a substantive entitiy of existence. This book vigourously challenges the long-standing theses of such scientific icons as Einstein, Carroll and Planck. At its heart is the daring question: Does time exist in the universe?
Saga of the Pony Express
Saga of the Pony Express (June 2002)
By Joseph J. DiCerto
America in the mid-1800s was a land of burgeoning cities, westward expansion, economic optimism, and political turmoil. Threatened by civil war and Indian uprisings, the government needed better communication with its far-flung citizens in the West. Three visionaries dreamt up a seemingly impossible solution: the Pony Express. An elite cadre of young riders would carry the U.S. mail across 2,000 miles of inhospitable wilderness in 10 days. For a brief yet crucial time, the system worked, until...
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The wall people: In search of a home
The wall people: In search of a home (1985)
By Joseph J DiCerto

The Calabashes, a family of five-inch people who live between the walls and ceilings of New York apartment buildings, endure the various trials of city life, moving to a new home during a thunderstorm and foiling a burglar intent on killing the human family living below them.