Learn History Through Fiction: A Fairyland of Electrical Wonders

The 1910 Chicago Electrical Show was billed as the most elaborate exposition ever held, with “everything that’s new in light, heat and power for the home, office, store, factory and farm on display.” It was advertised as a “Veritable Fairyland of Electrical Wonders” with $40,000 spent on decorations (worth $950,000 today). Displays included a Wright airplane exhibited by the U.S. Government, wireless telegraphy, and telephony. Read more Chicago history in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

1910 Chicago Electrical Show

Lively TAZIA AND GEMMA Book Reading

Great audience turnout and lively Q & A for the Tazia and Gemma book reading at the Ann Arbor Jewish Community Center on December 4. I read narrative passages from the first Tazia section and my daughter Rebecca joined me to read the mother-daughter interview from the first Gemma section. We also showed a short documentary film about the Triangle Waist Company fire, which opens the book. Thanks to the Ann Arbor JCC for hosting and to all who attended the Tazia and Gemma event. For a complete list of my publication events see NEWS; to read more about my books see NOVELS.

Learn History Through Fiction: U.S. Navy’s War Readiness

The San Diego Naval Base was commissioned in 1922 as U.S. Destroyer Base, San Diego. It grew rapidly during its first years as a repair facility and torpedo & radio school. In 1931, then Captain (later Fleet Admiral) Chester W. Nimitz assumed command and noted the “poor condition of decommissioned ships” in his report about the country’s readiness for war. During the Depression, the base survived with more than $2 million for dredging projects from the Public Works Administration (PWA). Then came WW II. Read more San Diego and Navy history in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Beatlemania Helps Cure an Ailing U.S.

The Beatles television appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show on February 9, 1964, was watched by an estimated 74 million viewers, half the U.S. population. Their send-off two days earlier at Heathrow airport was riotous, as was their arrival at the newly re-christened JFK airport, where 3,000 screaming fans greeted them. The youthful exuberance and snarky humor of the Fab Four was the perfect antidote for a country still reeling from President Kennedy’s assassination less than three months earlier. Read more about the Beatles and their U.S. debut in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

What I’m Reading: The Mars Room by Rachel Kushner

My Amazon and Goodreads review of The Mars Room (Rating 5) – No One is a Zero. Rachel Kushner’s novel The Mars Room, set in a bleak women’s prison, is unexpectedly life-affirming. The story of Romy Hall, serving a life sentence without parole, focuses less on external prison conditions, although Kushner paints a nitty-gritty portrait, than on the family created by the inmates. Inevitable animosities arise, but so does genuine affection between inmates in a sterile environment that nevertheless teems with hope. Sharing Romy’s regret that she didn’t appreciate small pleasures while she had the chance, readers vow not to take their own daily existence for granted. We thrill to Romy’s brief brush with freedom and inhale the awareness that neither she, nor we, are zero.

Learn History Through Fiction: Locked Doors at 1911 Triangle Waist Company Fire

During the 1911 Triangle Waist Company fire, employees could not escape because managers locked the doors to the stairwells and exits. This was a common practice to prevent workers from taking unauthorized breaks or pilfering material. Supervisors checked women’s purses on their way out each day, and even when they went to the bathroom. Read more about inhumane sweatshop conditions in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Big Shoulders for Strong Women

Remember when (really) “big” shoulders for women were fashionable in the 1980s, especially for those challenging the male-dominated corporate world? The trend was a revival of a style that flourished in the 1930s through the end of WWII. It began when Adrian Greenberg, costume designer for The Wizard of Oz, designed dresses with shoulder pads for MGM star Joan Crawford, who epitomized the hard-working and successful woman. Hollywood and fashion had a symbiotic relationship. Movie costumes influenced designers and the designer styles adopted by stars became popular with the general public. Read more about fashion trends and movie history in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).