Background
Weston grew up in Armonk, New York and graduated from Brown University with a Bachelor of Arts in History.
Weston grew up in Armonk, New York and graduated from Brown University with a Bachelor of Arts in History.
Brown University.
He spent a year at the London School of Economics, then earned a law degree from the University of Texas. He has been a lawyer for American Broadcasting Company Television and a journalist for American Broadcasting Company News, and has written articles for the New York Times, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and the New York Daily News. His one-character play, Meet George Orwell has been performed at Trinity College Oxford and the John Kennedy Presidential Library Theatre in Boston, among other venues. to start a company that makes geographical jigsaw puzzles for children.
He sold his firm three years later to a larger puzzle company, F.X. Schmid, then lived with a Japanese family near Tokyo while researching Giants of Japan.
Former Vice President Walter Mondale wrote the book’s foreword, and Foreign Affairs called it “vivid, an excellent introduction to Japanese history.” Giants of Japan went into paperback in 2002, and again in 2008. Weston has also written a children's book, Honda: The Boy Who Dreamed of Cars, that Lee & Low Books published in 2008.
In 2004, Weston was a Visiting Scholar at the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. He completed his next book, Prophets and Princes: Saudi Arabia from Muhammad to the Present, four years later.
Weston"s interest in the Middle East and Far East began with a 9th grade class in non-Western studies that Herb Klinger taught at Byram Hills High School, Armonk.
Weston is the son of writers. His father, William Weston, wrote and produced television documentaries, including The Soviet Woman for American Broadcasting Company News in 1963, and The Last Word, a Peabody award-winning talk show, for Columbia Broadcasting System in the mid-1950s. His mother, Marybeth Little Weston, was a poet, and the garden editor of House & Garden magazine during the 1970s.