Karavansara

East of Constantinople, West of Shanghai


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Aloha

Brains, Beauty & Breeches – World Tour Offer For Lucky Young Woman…. Wanted to join an expedition… Asia, Africa…

This ad appeared in a Nice (France) newspaper, in 1922.
Idris Galcia Hall – born in Canada in 1906 – was at the time a not-too-enthusiastic guest in a local convent. Her father, an English reserve officer, had died in Ypres, in 1917, and her mother was surviving on a small pension. Idris saw the advertisement as a good way to escape the convent, and make some money to support her mother.
So she skipped church, and went and met Captain Wanderwell, the guy that had posted the ad.

wanderwell-infront

I end up repeating the usual story – history is usually a lot weirder than fiction, and it’s peopled by characters that would be considered impossible if presented in a novel.
For instance…

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Why not keep going?

amy-johnsonDo they still have aviation races?

OK, let’s start from the beginning.

Amy Johnson was one of those women that always fascinated me – as a person, and as a representative of a category, a group of people.
Amy Johnson was an aviatrix.
Now, maybe today the  term is exist and politically incorrect, but I live at the borders of the Empire, so I can shrug it off – Amy Johnson was a pilot, a flyer, and yes, an aviatrix.
She took to the sky escaping a career as a solicitor in London.

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A gathering of giants

I found this image yesterday (on the PulpFest website) and it felt strange to find so many of my teenage heroes gathered in a single place.

Science-Fictioneers

Otto Binder, Manly Wade Wellman, Julius Schwartz,(front row, crouching).
Jack Williamson, L. Sprague de Camp, Dr. John Clark, Frank Belknap Long, Mort Weisinger, Edmond Hamilton, and Otis Adelbert Kline (back row, standing).

Because there was a time when giants walked this land.


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Ada Lovelace’s birthday

Today is the 200th birthday of Countess Ada Lovelace, widely recognized as the world’s first computer programmer.
So here’s (not the usual) picture of lovely Ada.

Ada-Lovelace

Ada Lovelace’s insights on possible applications for the Charles Babbage engine anticipated modern computer developments, and fired up science-fictional dreams and steampunk imagination.

That’s why we love her – and we are ready to forget about her bad temper, her manipulative character, her drinking, carousing, adultery and opium addiction.
For all her flaws, she was a swell girl.