Short Story “Orphan Camp” to be published in Summerset Review

I’m happy to announce that my short story “Orphan Camp” will be published in the December 15, 2018 online edition of Summerset Review. I’ll post the link in mid-December. Here’s the log line: “Orphan Camp” examines how the resilience that allowed Jewish children to survive during WWII made them resistant to adoption afterwards. Although set seventy years ago, the story speaks to today’s many war orphans.

 

Learn History Through Fiction: Flappers Out, Feminine In

After the boyish look of the 1920s flapper, women’s fashion in the 1930s returned to a feminine silhouette. The waist was where it belonged and bias-cut fabrics emphasized curves by hugging the hips. Dresses got longer, just below the knee for daytime and mid-calf for evening. Other innovations: three-quarter length sleeves, bold and contrasting colors, dainty white collars, and fur trim. Jaunty hats were worn tilted over the right eye, while brims became flatter and wider. Bobbed and curled hair, sleek and close to the head, peeked out from underneath, and makeup, artfully applied was more acceptable in polite society. Read more about changing fashions in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Clobbered by Hailstorms

(More about foul weather at a time when our minds are preoccupied by hurricanes and typhoons) Hail is formed during thunderstorms when there is an intense updraft, high water content increases, and, if the storm cloud is well below freezing, ice water forms. The colder the air temperature, the more hail. Hailstones are essentially layers of ice, sometimes too small to be noticed, other times golf-ball size or larger. Hailstorms can last 10-15 minutes. Read about a devastating Kansas hailstorm a century ago in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS.)

Learn History Through Fiction: Hyphenated American Soldiers in WWI

Nearly half the U.S. soldiers who fought in World War One were foreign born. Because of large-scale immigration at the turn of the 20th century, the U.S. changed from a population that was 60 percent British and 35 percent German at the time of the Civil War into the proverbial “melting pot” at the start of the Great War: 11 percent British, 20 percent German, 30 percent Italian and Hispanic, and 34 percent Slavic. In fact, one-third of all Americans were foreign born or the children of immigrants. WWI draftees, who today we might call “hyphenated Americans,” spoke 49 different languages. Although it made communication difficult, the recruits performed splendidly on the battlefield and were proud to fight — and die — for their country and its principles of democracy and inclusion. Read more about the era of WWI and the lives of an immigrant family on the Lower East Side in On the Shore (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Garment Workers Strike Two Years Before 1911 Triangle Waist Company Fire

In 1909, two years before the infamous 1911 Triangle Waist Company fire, shirtwaist factory workers in New York City went on strike to demand higher pay, shorter hours, and better working conditions (including ventilation, lighting, and bathroom breaks). Many manufacturers agreed, but not Triangle which instead fired 150 suspected union sympathizers. Read more about sweatshop labor 100 years ago in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: New York City’s Immigrant Population

New York City has always had a greater percentage of immigrants as part of its total population than the U.S. as a whole. Right before World War I, over 40% of its population was immigrants. After restrictions were passed in the 1920s, immigrants as a percentage of the city’s population dropped to 18% by 1970, before bouncing back up to 36% in 2000. Read more about NYC’s immigrant population one hundred years ago in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Stolen Ruby Slippers Found

One of four pairs of ruby slippers worn by Judy Garland in the 1939 Hollywood classic The Wizard of Oz, and stolen in 2005 from a museum in her home town of Grand Rapids, Minnesota, has been found. The FBI, which conducted the undercover operation, is still searching for those responsible. Read more about The Wizard of Oz and Judy Garland in A Brain. A Heart. The Nerve. (see NOVELS).

Learn History Through Fiction: Evading the Law in Las Vegas

The Mafia, a.k.a. the Mob, established a stronghold in Las Vegas during Nevada’s anti-gaming legislation (1911-1931) and national Prohibition (1920-1933). Both thrived in underground casinos and speakeasies. Read more about how the Mafia first infiltrated Las Vegas 100 years ago in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).

Announcing My New Agent: Sarah Yake at Frances Collin Literary Agency

I’m delighted to announce that I now have a literary agent to represent my work. Her name is Sarah Yake, with Frances Collins Literary Agency. She’ll begin with my novel The Great Stork Derby, and keep my short story collection Between the Wars in her back pocket. The agency is well established (founded 1948 as Marie Rodell-Frances Collin Literary Agency); it represents the estates of Rachel Carson & John A. Williams, among others. Most important, Sarah seems like a great match for me. If you’re curious, you can read more about the agency and Sarah at:
https://www.publishersmarketplace.com/members/slyyake/
http://www.manuscriptwishlist.com/mswl-post/sarah-yake/

Learn History Through Fiction: Hold the Sausage

In honor of Labor Day: Unsanitary Chicago meat-packing conditions documented in Upton Sinclair’s 1906 novel The Jungle included mixing rat droppings, dead rodents, and sawdust into sausages; adding red dye to spoiled meat to make it look fresh. There were even reports of workers falling into rendering tanks, being ground together with animal parts, and sold as lard. Read more Chicago and labor history in Tazia and Gemma (see NOVELS).