Due to the Thanksgiving Holiday, there is no broadcast today so there is no show to listen to. Hoping all had a pleasant holiday. Eat that turkey and enjoy the cranberries.
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The 43rd show. "Treasure Island" by Robert Lewis Stevenson, and "Huckleberry Finn" by Mark Twain (first pages) are read by Ruth. Here are two examples of the beginning of young boys and their adventures being told in book form. Before these books, the heros were mostly grown men of the hero/knight variety.
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The 42nd show. "Five Weeks in a Balloon" by Jules Verne started a worldwide hot air balloon fad. This first major balloon event (fictional) was sailing over Africa in comfort without illness or torture on the ground. It was fiction, but it started a fad. Next read is "Wizard of Oz" by L. Frank Baum and of course the Wizard is taking off in his hot air balloon.
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The 41st show. "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea," by Jules Verne, and "Cremation of Sam McGee," by Robert W. Service are read this week, and what a combination they are. A lot of fun...
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The 40th show. Today we hear some tough and tumble tales from the Old West. John Muir tells of being in an Avalanche in Yosemite. This story is from "Sequoia Tall Tree," "Sierra Club Bulletin," January 1920. Then we hear "Journalism in Tennessee" by Mark Twain. Talk about rough!
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The 39th show. "Firebelle Lillie" is read. Lillie was a lady from San Francisco so you be the judge if what she did was shocking. It certainly was fun.
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The 38th show. Again we read from Louisa May Alcott's "Hospital Sketches." On Sept. 20 we heard about Alcott getting a pass, and today we hear of her day in the hospital. And remember this is just after Fredricksburg in the Civil War. Then Ruth reads "The Cat and the Frog" from her book.
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The 37th show. The 150 year celebration of the Union Pacific. Ruth reads about the trians that made the West -- from "Sacramento" by W. Holden. This is THE research book on Sacramento. It's available at the Sacramento History Museum.
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The 36th show. Two stories by Ruth are read. "Sam and Tom" about two miners with a role reversal, and "The Cabin" about two young lovers. I write these stories because no on else has covered these topics, and the stories of the time should to be heard.
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The 35th show. It is not generally known, but Louisa May Alcott was a Civil War nurse. She was there after Fredericksburg so she saw the worst. She wrote about her time in "Hospital Sketches." Ruth had to send away for a copy of this book. It's not on the shelf in a store. Ruth also reads her own story, "Cat and the Frog."
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