Starting as a writer and editor for the Chicago
Daily News, Frisbie has served as editor of Chicago
magazine and Chicago creative director of such well-known
advertising agencies as Cunningham & Walsh and Campbell-Ewald.
His consulting services encompass the whole field of communications
from sales promotion to serious journalism.
Trade books by Richard Frisbie
- 1963 (and 2001): The Do-It-Yourself Parent
(co-author with Margery Frisbie)
- 1964: Family Fun and Recreation
- 1965: How to Peel a Sour Grape: an Impractical
Guide to Successful Failure
- 1968: Who Put the Bomb in Father Murphy's Chowder?
- 1969: It's a Wise Woodsman Who Knows What's
Biting Him
- 1975: Basic Boat Building (a Dolphin Book
Club selection originally titled "Boat Building for
Hands Who Are All Thumbs")
- 1998: Daily Meditations for Busy Grandpas
Marcquis annuals written and edited by Richard Frisbie
- 1976: Bicentennial Biographies
- 1977: Looking Back: 1877-1977
- 1978: Future Gazing
- 1979: Second Starts: It's Never as Late as You Think
- 1980: Vanished Glory: Towns Where the Date is Always Yesterday
- 1981: The Lure of the Islands
- 1982: Legends That Came to Life
- 1983: Speculations for Starry Nights
- 1984: Epic Escapes and Rescues
- 1985: Winners and Losers
- 1986: Traces of Adventure
- 1987: Adventure: the Art of Living Dangerously
- 1988: Larger-Than-Life Americans
- 1989: Mansions Haunted by History
- 1990: Under the Farthest Horizon
- 1991: The Inconstant Earth
- 1992: Encore for the Gay '90s
- 1993: 2003 and Beyond
- 1994: What's for Dinner Tomorrow
- 1995: Health Care and Human Destiny
- 1996: Turning Points With a Twist
- 1997: The Day Lincoln Wasn't Shot and Other Stories That
Could Have Turned Out Another Way
- 1998: Where People of the Past Bring History to Life
Publishing Consultant
Richard Frisbie has created publication formats as consultant
to R. R. Donnelley & Sons, the world's largest printer, and worked
with a number of publishers on both circulation and advertising
promotion. He has edited magazines and newsletters sponsored by
clients ranging from Chrysler Corporation and Capital Cities Communications
to the Claretian Fathers and Brothers. He overhauled Traffic
Safety magazine for the National Safety Council and edited
it for two years. (He also wrote the circulation promotion copy.)
As the author of 400 magazine articles and seven books, he has
appeared on local and national radio and television shows. His
books have been reviewed in a wide range of publications, from
Parents magazine to Business Week
to The New York Times.
Advertising Consultant
During his big-agency days, he worked on many major accounts
and won awards for both print and broadcast advertising. In recent
years, he has served as a creative resource for advertising agencies
and sales promotion companies as well as certain advertisers with
special needs, including radio, TV and Web site content.
Public Relations Consultant
When McGraw-Edison merged with Studebaker-Worthington, Frisbie
was called in to write a special publication explaining it all
to the employees of both corporations. When Northern Illinois
Gas became Nicor, Inc., he wrote the sound/filmstrip introducing
the new logo to the board of directors. When Sears Roebuck wished
to revive its traditional image, he wrote the scenarios for the
illustrations used on the covers of the fall and the Christmas
catalogs that year. These are examples of many special communications
assignments for major clients. A series of public service television
spots written and produced by Frisbie Communications for the Claretians
played free in 125 cities. Frisbie helped organize and served
initially as executive secretary of the National Satellite Cable
Association.
Public Servant
Frisbie has been president of the Illinois Center for the Book,
an affiliate of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress;
the Society of Midland Authors; the Arlington Heights public library;
and the North Suburban Library System, a state-funded co-operative
of libraries in the north and northwest suburbs of Chicago. He
was re-elected in 2005 to his eighth term as an Arlington Heights
library trustee. He served four terms as president.
The Illinois Library Association in 2004 named him trustee of
the year and gave him the ILA Intellectual Freedom Award.
Biographical reference: Who's Who in
America (55th-58th editions).
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