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I recently read a Bill Bryson book: One Summer America, 1927, which I thought was really good. It's this tiny little sliver of History in that one summer about what went on and the implications for the coming years.
As a Long Islander, it was sometimes even a little too close to home! -for example, that summer, a woman named Ruth Snyder conspired with her lover to murder her husband for the insurance. They both got caught and got the electric chair for their efforts. What made this case even more notorious was the fact that a reporter secretly photographed her execution and it wound up on the front page of a major newspaper the next day. The murder happened within 3 miles from where I grew up. Similarly, and also that summer, and also within those 3 miles, Charles Lindbergh took off from Roosevelt Field headed for Paris. Meanwhile, a conference of international banks were meeting maybe 5 miles from where I'm sitting right now, and the monetary policies they agreed on are often considered to have worsened the stock market crash and Depression that followed two years later.
So it was quite a summer here, and other than the Lindbergh part of it, I'm kind of glad I missed it!
Last edited by Steve Klare; March 15, 2024, 06:09 AM.
The book mentioned in that post, A Thousand Cuts - The bizarre underground world of collectors and dealers who saved the movies is also a worthwhile read. You are left with the impression that movie collectors are prone turning the art of film curation into hoarding.
I have A "Thousand Cuts" as a hardcover, and I've vowed to reread it every couple of years just to try to keep some kind of perspective.
-don't want to become that guy who had trouble climbing his stairs because of all the cans of film on the steps...at least until the day the film avalanche came!
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