Tuesday, April 25, 2023
Lincoln on the Verge
Saturday, February 4, 2023
Valley Forge
Sunday, January 1, 2023
Cadillac Desert (1986)
Wednesday, December 14, 2022
The Great Air Race: Glory, Tragedy, and the Dawn of American Aviation
Mitchell was a WW1 flying veteran and a member of the military administration for a long period, very forward thinking but also a risk taker with other people's lives. Most of the planes in the race were WW1 surplus and many of the pilots were veterans of WW1. Many people died participating in the race, many planes crashed and many people's reputations were established by participating in the race.
This book along with Into the Silence and the Moth and the Mountain have an intersection that is interesting. While early flight and 1920s Himalyan mountain climbing might not appear to have a lot in common, the people involved in them do. So many of these men were WW1 vets at a time long before PTSD was diagnosed. For many it seems that the manic pace and high risk of their lives may have been their own reaction to the horrors of participating in 'the Great War'. That would be an interesting research project.
Saturday, November 26, 2022
Into the Silence
Sunday, October 30, 2022
Cuba: An American History
Saturday, October 29, 2022
The Moth and the Mountain
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.