From my library: The Wright Brothers

Card catalogue dataThe Wright Brothers paperback
The Wright Brothers by David McCullough (New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2015, 2016)
Categories: U.S. history, biography; aeronautics
Format: Paperback
Pages: 262 (321 with end matter)

This is the third book I read in June, and the 14th book I read in 2016.

Bottom line
This engaging biography shows the tenacity, ability, and curiosity of a couple of Dayton bicycle mechanics as they begin the age of flight.

About the author/Why I read this book
I had to put these two categories together because they interweave. I love reading U.S. history and biography and there is no better writer in this genre than David McCullough. His most well-known book is John Adams, on which the 2008 HBO miniseries was based. McCullough twice received the Pulitzer Prize, for John Adams and for Truman. He also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom among many other awards and honors. He is among my top five favorite authors of any genre. He makes history read like a novel. I will read anything he has published.

By the way, years ago McCullough was the narrator voice for the PBS series American Experience. I love his voice. I find my mind reading his books in his voice. As a bonus, the audio version of the book is read by the author himself.

Beyond just the appeal to me of the author, the subject itself is fascinating. It’s hard for us now in the 21st century to imagine, but try to put yourself in the time frame, when manned, heavier-than-air flight was an impossibility. Yes, I knew about the Wright flier. I remember visiting D.C. as a seventh grade student and seeing it suspended in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. (You can also see a replica here locally at the Tellus Museum in Cartersville, Georgia. And at The Henry Ford in Dearborn, Michigan, you can see the Wright family’s home and the Wright Cycle Shop.) But beyond the flier and knowing they carried their experiments out at KItty Hawk, I knew very little about them.

What I’ve learned
Of course I already knew of the two brothers, Wilbur and Orville Wright. But in this book I learned of the important roles that their sister Katharine Wright and their father Bishop Milton Wright played. I felt like I knew this family after reading this book. What was most fascinating was the brothers’ tenacity. Yes, they had abilities and intellect, but it was their dogged determination that made the difference for them. It’s a great reminder that persistence will win over talent and skill every time.

Favorite quote

No bird soars in a calm.

—Wilbur Wright

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Highly recommended.

Author’s sources
McCullough’s sources are always extensive. The greatest treasure trove can be found at the Library of Congress, where many of the Wright family papers are stored. Included in this stash are the many letters the family wrote. McCullough says the entire family wrote so clearly and expressed their thoughts so well in writing. In our 21st century world we seem to be losing that ability.

Other related books
If you would like to read further on the topic of inventions and discoveries at the turn of the 20th century, I would highly recommend McCullough’s book The Greater Journey: Americans in Paris, another fascinating book.

Wowsie wowsie woo woo: How attitude changes everything

Schleprock
Bad Luck Schleprock

I remember a short-lived cartoon from when I was about nine or ten years old called The Pebbles and Bam-Bam Show. It focused on the Flinstones’ and the Rubbles’ kids in their teenage years. Sally Struthers (Gloria on All in the Family) and Jay North (Dennis the Menace) voiced the title characters. But the character that stands out the most was Bad Luck Schleprock (voiced by Don Messick, who was also behind the similar voice of Droopy the Dog and hundreds of other cartoon characters from my youth).

Schleprock’s signature line was, “Oh wowsie wowsie woo woo. Miserable day, isn’t it?” He seemed to live under a perpetual dark cloud and brought bad luck with him wherever he went. You could say he was the death of the party due to his poor attitude.

The word “attitude” has gotten a bad rap in recent years. It’s often come to mean that someone has given us some lip or has been seen as too haughty. As in, “Don’t give me that attitude!”

Or we tend to think of attitude as something that happens to us. As if we have no control over it. It’s like a cloud that settles over us and we have no way to get out from under it. Wowsie wowsie woo woo.

But many times we have much more control over our attitude than we realize. And it’s the successful person who has figured out how to maximize a positive attitude in order to move forward.

At no time is this more important than when we fail. When we stumble, it is so easy to fall into a pit of despair and failure, wallowing in a negative attitude that colors the rest of our day. We find ourselves under a cloud. And it seems to move with us.

Even the word “fail” has such negative baggage with it, and is so close to the word “failure.” No one wants to be a failure, but it’s easy to go from “I’ve failed” to “I’m a failure.”

What if, instead, we looked at failures as opportunities to learn? What if, instead of beating ourselves up, we did some deep thinking about how we can grow from the experience and be better the next time? What if, instead of feeling defeated, we took an honest appraisal of what went well and what we can improve on, and looked with a positive attitude to how we can be even better?

We have the power to walk out from under that dark cloud and create a new reality. And it all starts with attitude.

Beautiful day, isn’t it?