brf1948
Taylor Brown is one of the authors I read and read again every few years. He can always bring a smile to my face and peace to my heart. And with every reading, I can find something new I missed. Some mind picture to add to the story in my head. Wingwalkers was a novel I knew I had to have ASAP. And boy, was it worth the wait! Based on a chance meeting on Mayday in 1925 in New Orleans between gypsy stunt flyers and the author William Faulkner, this is a tale to keep you up all night. We will be backtracking history, returning to the age of 'balloonatics' and the Wright brothers and their followers at the turn of the twentieth century. We follow the growth of air travel as it occurred, and several pilots of World War 1 as they travel across America following that war, working in small towns with airplane rides and wing walker thrills into the 1930s. As the Depression bites down, they are lucky to make groceries and fuel for the plane, which burns castor oil, and enough coin to print copies of the fliers of their upcoming acts, which they drop over a town center the night before their afternoon show. Our intrepid wing-walker is Della the Daring Mackintosh, and her husband and pilot Zeno Marigold, who touts himself as a Double Ace of the Great War with eleven aerial victories over the trenches of France. Most nights they sleep under the wing of the plane in some farmer's field, and after the afternoon show they will fly on to the next town, drop fliers, and bed down for the night. They have to find a place to land before dark, so they can check out the landing area. And everywhere they go, everything they do, they are accompanied by Sark, their Scottish Terrier. Della's dream as she wing walks and hangs from the undercarriage and does gymnastics on the fly from hardpoint to hardpoint while in flight is just to make it to Hollywood, which was her mother's dream, as well. She is fairly sure they will make it out of Georgia - eventually. Zeno just hopes the pistons and rings in the old motor of their Curtiss Flying Jenny will hold out until they get far enough south to winter over and rebuild the motor. And then in New Orleans, they will meet author William Faulkner, who has dreams - and secrets - of his own. What a tale!