Ann S. Epstein writes novels, short stories, memoir, essays, and poems. Please use the links or site menu to go to the HOME PAGE; learn about her NOVELS, SHORT STORIES, MEMOIR, ESSAYS, and POEMS; find interesting facts in BEHIND THE STORY; read REFLECTIONS on writing; check NEWS for updates on publications and related events; see REVIEWS; learn about her END-OF-LIFE DOULA credentials and services; and CONTACT US to send webmail.
Author: annsepstein@att.net
Ann S. Epstein is an award-winning writer of novels, short stories, memoirs, and essays.
In 1941, the San Diego Naval Air Station began training pilots for the U.S. Air Force, a total that reached 31,400 pilots by the end of World War II in 1945. However, years before the war began, Japanese aviators trained at the school, including Lieutenant Otozo Yamada, who would later head the Imperial Japanese Naval Aviation Army. Read more about San Diego’s military facilities and aviation industry in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).
San Diego Naval Air Station trained 31,400 pilots during WW II Lt. Yamata, head of Japan’s Naval Aviation Army in WWII, trained at San Diego years before the war Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein
In 1956, San Diego’s El Cortez Hotel added the world’s first outside glass hydraulic elevator, designed by C.J. Paderewski who worked for Otis Elevator. The glamorous apartment-hotel, which opened in 1927, dominated the city’s skyline for years. The large “El Cortez” sign, added in 1937, illuminated the night. The elevator, taking guests to the rooftop Starlight Room Restaurant, was reportedly a bellboy’s idea. The Travolator bridge, essentially a moving walkway or flat escalator, was built in 1959 to connect the hotel with the owner’s new motel across the street. Read more about the “Starlight Express” elevator and San Diego’s history in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).
“Starlight Express” outdoor glass elevator at San Diego’s El Cortez Hotel “Travolator” was a horizontal escalator bridging a San Diego street Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein
The Wizard of Oz was officially released 80 years ago today on August 25, 1939. MGM previewed the movie in Wisconsin two weeks earlier to test its popularity in the Midwest, where the film is set, and see the audience response to Technicolor. Viewers were wowed! The film was also shown in Hollywood on August 15 and New York City on August 17 before it opened nationwide on August 25. Initial reviews were mostly positive, but some criticized MGM for encroaching on Disney territory. With average ticket prices 25 cents (and only 10 or 15 cents for children), it was a decade before MGM recouped its nearly $3 million investment, and the film’s longevity wasn’t assured until CBS began annual television broadcasts in 1956. Read more about the making of The Wizard of Oz and its “big” and “little” stars in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).
It took MGM a decade to recoup its $3 million investment in The Wizard of Oz A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (Alternative Book Press) by Ann S. Epstein
Debates about clothes cheaply made overseas have been in the news lately. Consider the other end of the apparel spectrum. Savile Row is a shopping street in central London famous for men’s bespoke tailoring. The term “bespoke” is believed to have originated there when cloth for a suit was said to “be spoken” for by individual customers. The short street, termed the “golden mile of tailoring,” opened its first men’s store in 1846 when Henry Poole moved his 50-year-old establishment to Number 15. Since then, Savile Row’s customers have included Napoleon III, Winston Churchill, Lord Nelson, Lawrence Olivier, Duke Ellington, Muhammad Ali, and Prince Charles. Read more about the creative and competitive world of fashion and tailoring in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).
Bespoke clothes from Savile Row have been worn by men from Napoleon III to Duke Ellington A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (Alternative Book Press) by Ann S. Epstein
While researching the short story “Spinning,” I discovered yet another (egregious) example of history repeating itself. After the Civil War, when cotton once again flowed to the North, hundreds of thousands of French-Canadian immigrants came south across the order to work in the textile mills of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. By 1900, one-tenth of New Englanders spoke French. The immigrants clustered in communities dubbed “Little Canadas,” often over-crowded, company-owned tenements. Determined to maintain their culture, the Catholic “invaders” aroused suspicion among their Protestant neighbors and raised alarms throughout the nation. In 1881, The New York Times described them as “ignorant and unenterprising. They care nothing for our free institutions, have no desire for civil or religious liberty or the benefits of education.” There was fear that they planned to colonize the northeast corner of the continent and create “New France” under the control of the Roman Catholic faith. Groups like the Know Nothings and American Protective Association burned Catholic churches, assaulted priests, and attacked Catholic neighborhoods. The fear of French Canadians waned only when immigrants began to arrive from farther afield: Jews and non-Protestants from Southern and Eastern Europe. Today the perceived threat to the “American way of life” comes from south of the border, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. The location of origin changes, but the reaction on U.S. shores doesn’t. To learn more about the immigrant experience and other topics in my writing — from historical to contemporary, serious to humorous, and realistic to absurdist — see NOVELS and SHORT STORIES.
U.S. Protestants saw French-Canadian Catholic immigrants as a threat to the “American way of life” Know Nothings burned Catholic churches and assaulted priests
The 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act creates the right to a minimum wage, and “time-and-a-half” pay when people work over 40 hours a week. It also prohibits most employment of minors in “oppressive child labor.” The law applies to employees and enterprises engaged in or producing goods for interstate commerce. States can still regulate their internal child labor force but federal rules are usually, although not always, applied if they are stricter. Read more about labor laws over the last century in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).
Fair Labor Standards Act enacted under FDR in 1938 Child labor widespread, grueling, and dangerous until 1938 Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein
Removing the bodies of the 1911 Triangle Waist Company fire’s 146 victims was grim work. Using a block and tackle, firemen lowered nets or blankets with 2 or 3 bodies at a time to policemen 8 to 10 floors below, who spread them in a row on a dark red canvas. Ambulances then transported the bodies to Bellevue Morgue. Patrol wagons were sent to help but, delayed by the slow process, were forced to line up like taxicabs waiting to pick up customers. Read more about the tragedy in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).
Triangle fire victims were lowered to the sidewalk using a block and tackle Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein
After a successful career as a commercial artist in the 1950s, Andy Warhol became an avant-garde artist and a film maker at his studio, The Factory, in the 1960s. His iconic images of pop stars (Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley, Muhammad Ali) and American products (Campbell’s soup, Coca Cola) brought him fame. His dictum was “A Coke is a Coke and no amount of money can get you a better Coke than the one the bum on the corner is drinking.” Warhol is also known for claiming, “In the future, everyone will be world-famous for 15 minutes.” Warhol was more entrepreneurial in the 1970s, founding Interview magazine and publishing The Philosophy of Andy Warhol. He said, “Making money is art, and working is art, and good business is the best art.” Read more about Andy Warhol in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).
Warhol’s iconic Marilyn Monroe Warhol erased the line between commercialism and art A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (Alternative Book Press) by Ann S. Epstein
In June 1948, the Palomar Observatory opened in San Diego. Construction of the 200-inch mirror for the Hale Telescope, named for its inventor George Ellery Hale, had begun in 1934. Edwin Powell Hubble, who in 1929 discovered that clouds of light in the night sky were from galaxies beyond the Milky Way, was the first astronomer to use the telescope. It remained the largest in the world until 1975, when the Russians built a bigger one. Discover more San Diego history in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).
The Hale Telescope’s 200-inch mirror at Palomar Observatory in San Diego took 14 years to build Astronomer Edwin Powell Hubble discovered light from galaxies beyond the Milky Way Tazia and Gemma (Vine Leaves Press) by Ann S. Epstein
The Wizard of Oz was previewed in Kenosha and Oconomowoc, Wisconsin 80 years ago today, on August 12, 1939. MGM wanted to test how popular the movie, which begins and ends in Kansas, would be in the Midwest, and see whether its nearly $3 million investment in Technicolor would pay off. Recalls a 91-year-old woman who saw the premier as a preteen, “It was very impressive because we had never seen a color film before.” The Hollywood premiere was on August 15 at Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. The New York City premiere was held at Loew’s Capitol Theatre on August 17, followed by a live performance with Judy Garland and her co-stars. The film opened nationwide on August 25, 1939, its official release date. Read more about the making of The Wizard of Oz and its “big” and “little” stars in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).
MGM premiered The Wizard of Oz in Wisconsin to test its popularity in the MidwestA Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (Alternative Book Press) by Ann S. Epstein