Saturday, October 26, 2024

Into Unknown Skies

Into Unknown Skies: An Unlikely Team, a Daring Race, and the First Flight Around the World by David K. Randall

The true account the first flight to go around the world, in stages and over 175 days. The Douglas World Cruiser aircraft was a 2 seater open cockpit plane. The US team started in Seattle and flew west, flying through freezing arctic conditions and through broiling desert heat. The US team started with 4 planes, each plane had a pilot and mechanic. Any time something brokde on the planes, the crew had to fix everything themselves. The US team had one plane actually finish the race. Other attempts were made by the UK, France, Portugal and Argentina. Each of these had a single plane. The major advantage the the US had was the US Navy havnig ships that supported the effort. This race was the idea of Gneral Mitchell in an attempt to get support for a more robust US military air effort.

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Henry V

Henry V by Dan Jones.

Henry V was king of England in the early 1400s. A relatively short reign but a very active one. He brough Wales back to England after a very tough rebellion, and spent many years and battles in France, mostly Normandy. The most famous of his battles was Agincourt, where he was outnumbered in troops by the French. This was a very well written history, which I wanted to keep going. He fought so many battles in Normandy that I began to wonder if the Allies had studied these battles before launching D-Day.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

The Notebook

The Notebook: A History of Thinking on Paper by Roland Allen

Not to be confused with the Nicolas Spark book, as the subtitle says this is about paper and it application to notebooks. The basic premise is that when paper started to be mass produced in Italy in the 1400 this allowed the renaisanse to take off. Before this writing was done on velum, time consuming and expensive to produce and basically used the the Church to illuminated manuscripts. With paper readily available artists could carry a sketch book with them wherever they went and practice their craft. The best known of the notebooks are Leonardo Da Vinci's, of which a portion survive. Cheap notebooks allowed for diaries, journals, sketchbooks, thought diaries, lists, idea books to be carried by many people. There is also the premise that writing changed the way people think and work and the act of writing in a notebook allowed people to become better writers and thinkers.