Saturday, October 29, 2022

The Moth and the Mountain

The Moth and the Mountain by Ed Caesar. We were in a book store a few weeks ago and i saw a book titled 'The Moth and the Mountain'. My first thought was I wonder if the moth is a Dehavalland moth. I picked up the book and it was about the plane! The plane of the title was a Gypsy Moth, and the mountain is Everest.

I 1933 this crazy englishman decided he would fly from England to Everest and climb the mountain solo. He did not know how to fly and was not a mountaineer.

But, he bought a used Gyspy Moth, took flying lessons for two months and the flew all the way to the border of Nepal. There he could not get permits to go further so he disguised himself as an Indian priest and walked the rest of the way to Everest. He actually got pretty far up the mountain, but on his second try he died of exposure. But it is a great story and so funny that Dehavalland biplane was a big part of it.

Thursday, October 6, 2022

Mercury Rising: John Glenn, John Kennedy, and the New Battleground of the Cold War

Mercury Rising: John Glenn, John Kennedy, and the New Battleground of the Cold War by Jeff Shesol. This is the story of the US space program, basically from Sputnik to John Glenn's orbiting the earth. Lots of info on the 'space race' with the Soviets and the battle for funding for the US program. A lot of this book focuses on John Glen, his background and his family life. Covers much of the same period as the book and movie 'The Right Stuff' but without the dramatics, more of the nuts and bolts of the space program. For people already familiar with the history of the space program, the author does not spend time explaining things he knows his audience is already familiar with.

Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Travels With George

Travels With George: In Search of Washington and His Legacy by Nathaniel Philbrick. The author retraces the route that Washingto took at the beginning of his presidency to traverse the original 13 states, test the attitude of the country and promote his federalists ideas. Interesting travelogue and comparisons of Washington's time and now, seeing what is still the same, which is more than you would think, but of course what has changed.

Saturday, September 17, 2022

The Car

The Car by Bryan Appleyard. This comprehensive book is a history of, well the car. The author takes us from the early 1800s when the horse was dominant, through the present day and the advent of the electric car. In many ways this is a rehash of stories that we have heard before if you followed the story of autos, Benz, Ford, Chevy, all the names we know. But the writing style is friendly and engaging. Every age has its issues, from the tons of horse manure that inundated cities before the car, to the environmental issues that are coming to light with the rise of the electric car. This book is best read while sitting in front of a computer so you can google the names of cars that the author brings up for different eras. Cars in culture, as status symbols, as liberating machines, in war, as style setters, cars in film, as changing the makeup of how we live and work. While there may be nothing new in this volume, it is comprehensive and weaves together a story that is ever changing and that we are in the middle of living.

Sunday, August 14, 2022

No Ordinary Time

No Ordinary Time by Doris Kearns Goodwin. Supposedly about the US home front in WW2, this is really about Franklin and Eleanor during the war. Which is ok but it gets to be a bit much of them. Many stories of the amazing energy they had, in many ways astounding. It would been nice to have more of other peoples stories. An interesting companion to the books 'Citizens of London' and 'The Splendid and the Vile'.

Monday, July 25, 2022

Citizens of London

Citizens of London by Lynne Olson. This book covers the same time period as "The Splendid and the Vile", 1940 and 1941 London. But where Spendid focuses on Churchill and the British leadership and their set, Citizens focuses on the Americans who were in London for this period. Specifically Averill Harriman, Lend Lease coordinator, Gil Winant, American Ambassodor to Britain and Edward Murrow, war correspondent. Of course Churchill shows up in this book, since he was everywhere during the blitz. The author focuses on the different personalities of the main charecters, and the contrast between living in London with its deprevations and the American experience of the War on the home front, which were basically polar opposites.

Saturday, July 16, 2022

The Church of Baseball: The Making of Bull Durham

The Church of Baseball: The Making of Bull Durham by Ron Shelton. This is the account of the making of the film by the screenwriter and director Shelton. It can be interesting at times, Shelton gives his background as a minor league baseball player when he was in his twenties, an experience that let him mine for the development of the script. There are lots of stories of the studio not supporting the film, which has gone on to become a classic. Shelton is very generous to the actors in the film. He does become bogged down at time with some of the details of the eperience, which feels like it might be a positive thing for him to get off his chest, but slows things down. I skipped over several parts, basically in the second half of the book.