![]() ![]() 29, 1993.įrances Padorr Brent, “Beryl Markham: Truly Adventurous But Perhaps Less Than Honest,” Chicago Tribune, Sept. 3, 1993.Ĭhristopher Reed, “Inside Story: Beryl’s Crash Landing,” Guardian, Sept. Jane O’Reilly, “Never Down to Earth,” New York Times, Oct. “Beryl Markham: An Obituary,” Times, Aug. “Aviator Beryl Markham Went With the Wind,” Sunday Tribune, June 4, 2017, 13.Įrin Pottie, “Piece of History?”, Chronicle-Herald, Aug. Nate Pederson, “West With the Night,” Aviation History 20:1 (September 2009), 62-62.ĭiana Ketcham, “Bad Girl,” Nation 245:17 (Nov. Paula McLain, “An Insanely Glamorous Love Triangle,” Town & Country, Sept. Lovell, Straight on Till Morning: The Life of Beryl Markham, 2011.īeryl Markham, West With the Night, 1942.ĭerek O’Connor, “The Remarkable Mrs. ![]() Sources for our feature on Beryl Markham: ![]() In August 1972, Applied Optics determined that Heaven is hotter than Hell. In 1974, Stewart Coffin devised a topological puzzle without a solution. ![]() We’ll also portray some Canadian snakes and puzzle over a deadly car. In this week’s episode of the Futility Closet podcast we’ll review her eventful life, including her historic solo flight across the Atlantic in 1936. Beryl Markham managed to fit three extraordinary careers into one lifetime: She was a champion racehorse trainer, a pioneering bush pilot, and a best-selling author. ![]()
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