When in 1921 Edith Wharton became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, for her novel The Age of Innocence, she was 59 years old, permanently settled in France, and almost a legend in the United States. Her best-known works, The House of Mirth and Ethan Frome among them, had been…
This year marks the eightieth anniversary of the dedication of U.S. Route 66, born in 1926 and completed in 1938. What started as a link between Chicago and Los Angeles—a 2,400-mile hodgepodge of diagonal connections between farm towns across the Midwest and West—became a legend. Even half a…
The new museum from the air, its main building slanted to suggest the flag-raising at Iwo Jima. (Courtesy of the United States Marine Corps)
This Monday, November 13, 2006, the new National Museum of the Marine Corps Heritage Center opens in Quantico, Virginia, a 20-minute drive from Washington, D…
When I first heard that a new multi-city Titanic exhibition was coming to San Francisco and several other places around the country, I had to wonder, is the public really still hungry for more details of the famous disaster? It’s not even the hundredth anniversary of the sinking, which will hit…