Parachute Specialist

Job counselor Dick Bolles ’50 keeps “chugging away.”

Photograph of Dick Bolles, author of "What Color Is Your Parachute"
Dick BollesGlenn Jones

At 88, Dick Bolles ’50 could be forgiven for slowing down. But the author of What Color Is Your Parachute?—the perennially best-selling how-to guide for job-hunters that’s been updated annually since 1975—still maintains a healthy schedule of lunchtime appointments and speaks, consults, and attends conferences around the country.

Meanwhile, the production of What Color Is Your Parachute? remains a largely Bollesian enterprise. Eschewing secretaries, he spends two to three hours every day poring over newspapers and scouring the Internet, doing research. In the evenings, he says, he and his wife watch foreign detective mysteries, but after she goes to bed around 11, Bolles stays up for another three to four hours. “That’s when I love to write,” he explains. “Everything’s so quiet, and I never have any appointments.”

After Harvard, Bolles moved to New York to study at General Theological Seminary. As an ordained Episcopal minister, he first served in New Jersey, but eventually took a job in San Francisco. When he was laid off because of a budget crisis, he was offered another job, as “a kind of roving ambassador” to the campus ministries and chaplains of 10 Christian denominations in the nine western states. “And it turned out, they were all being let go,” also because of budget cuts, “and they knew my history, and they said, ‘Why don’t you figure out what you can do to help us,’” he recalls. “So I said, I’ll travel around, I’ll see what I can find out, and I’ll summarize my findings for you—and that was the first edition of What Color Is Your Parachute?

The book, originally self-published, was quickly picked up by the fledgling Ten Speed Press, and began to sell steadily. Some of its continuing popularity may derive from the sense of empathy permeating the text. Bolles has not only been jobless, he’s faced other tragedies, including the assassination of his brother, investigative journalist Don Bolles, and the death of a son in surgery. “I’m a man of prayer,” he says, “and I delight in reading. When you fill your memory with hymns,…with poetry,…with stories, you get a sensitivity to your soul that doesn’t vanish, that doesn’t get beaten down over the years.”

What Color Is Your Parachute? has also faced challenges over the years, including the rise of the Internet—which Bolles has countered by updating the book more frequently and creating the website jobhuntersbible.com, an online hub for the book where he writes frequent blog posts. He maintains that only the outward form of the job hunt has changed: perusing classifieds in the daily paper has given way to browsing websites like monster.com and careerbuilder.com.

“I just keep chugging away,” he reports, giving matters of legacy and longevity short shrift. Writing and refining a book for 40 years amasses many things—money, followers, a reputation—but none so important, to Bolles, as responsibility. As he puts it, “I’m trying not to betray the faith that people put in me.”

Read more articles by: Bailey Trela

You might also like

The Picture of Freedom

A Boston Athenaeum exhibit explores an abolitionist with Harvard ties.

Jeff Lichtman Appointed Dean of Science

Neuroscientist to lead Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences division

New Kennedy School Dean Announced

Stanford political scientist Jeremy Weinstein set to lead

Most popular

Diversifying Diet

A little-known diet improves cardiovascular health through several distinct mechanisms. 

Jeff Lichtman Appointed Dean of Science

Neuroscientist to lead Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences division

Harvard Square Meals—and Beyond

The cafés and restaurants of Harvard Square sure to impress for breakfast and lunch.

More to explore

How is Artificial Intelligence Being Taught at Harvard?

A new Harvard course on artificial intelligence teaches students how to use the tool responsibly.

The Evolution of Human Fathers

Exploring the evolutionary biology of human fathers as caretakers

Civil War American Writer and Abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier

Homes of the poet and abolitionist, whose verses were said to have inspired Abraham Lincoln.