Flight to the Top of the World: The Adventures of Walter Wellman

Available
Product Details
Price
$29.95  $27.85
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Publish Date
Pages
392
Dimensions
7.73 X 1.3 X 9.48 inches | 1.62 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780803296787
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
David L. Bristow is an associate director at the Nebraska State Historical Society, where he serves as the journal editor of Nebraska History and book editor for the society's scholarly and popular books. He is the author of Sky Sailors: True Stories of the Balloon Era and A Dirty, Wicked Town: Tales of Nineteenth Century Omaha.
Reviews
"David Bristow does an admirable job of setting Walter Wellman's story in the broader context of both American history and the history of polar exploration. This is an important addition not only to Wellman's biography but to the history and impact of American journalism in the early years of the twentieth century."--Tom D. Crouch, senior curator of aeronautics at the National Air and Space Museum and author of The Bishop's Boys
-- (09/16/2017)
"Walter Wellman deserves to be known. He led five expeditions seeking the North Pole. He was the first to try to cross the Atlantic Ocean by air. He was a widely read national affairs reporter in Washington, D.C., and a confidant to presidents. When he did these things--in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries--he was known, famous even. But today his name and his exploits have been lost to history.
David L. Bristow, in Flight to the Top of the World, sets out to bring Wellman back to public awareness."--Timothy Anderson, Nebraska History--Timothy Anderson "Nebraska History "
"Walter Wellman is a name virtually unknown to most readers. Yet, he was one of our country's most famous individuals during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, recognized as both a journalist and an adventurer. . . . Bristow portrays him as one of the first "instant celebrities" now embraced by our present culture. Indeed, had he been born a century later, he would have undoubtedly starred in his own reality show. . . . Readers should appreciate Bristow's reintroduction of this colorful reminder of America's past."--J. Kemper Campbell, Lincoln Journal Star-- (05/19/2019)
"With its plethora of flying machines, newfangled radios, grubby mechanics, media frenzies, its Arctic backdrop, and more, this would be a great steampunk novel were it not entirely factual."--David James, Anchorage Daily News--David James"Anchorage Daily News" (10/26/2019)