Gilbert Cant

|birth_place=London, England |death_date= |occupation=Journalist |nationality=American }} Gilbert Cant (September 16, 1909 – August 1, 1982) was a London-born American journalist.

Cant arrived in the U.S. in 1934 and began working for the ''New York Post'' in 1937. He was a war correspondent in the Pacific during World War II and wrote three books on the subject, ''The War at Sea'', ''America's Navy in World War II'', and ''The Great Pacific Victory''. He joined ''Time'' in 1943 and was their medical editor from 1949 to 1969.

Cant was a member of the all-male literary banqueting club the Trap Door Spiders, which served as the basis of Isaac Asimov's fictional group of mystery solvers the Black Widowers. Cant himself was the model for the Thomas Trumbull character. After Cant died, Asimov dedicated the collection ''Banquets of the Black Widowers'' (1984) to his memory and to that of Frederic Dannay.

In an essay in the September 4, 1972 issue of ''Time'', Cant famously wrote of Reuben Fine, "When Fine switched his major interest from chess to psychoanalysis, the result was a loss for chess—and a draw, at best, for psychoanalysis." Provided by Wikipedia
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  1. 1
    by Cant, Gilbert
    Published 1944
    Book
  2. 2
    by Cant, Gilbert
    Published 1976
    Book
  3. 3
    by Cant, Gilbert
    Published 1942
    Book
  4. 4
    by Cant, Gilbert
    Published 1946
    Book
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