Pancho Barnes was a force of nature, a woman who lived a big,
messy, colorful, unconventional life. She ran through three
fortunes, four husbands, and countless lovers. She outflew Amelia
Earhart, outsmarted Howard Hughes, outdrank the Mexican Army, and
out- maneuvered the U.S. government. In The Happy Bottom Riding
Club, award-winning author Lauren Kessler tells the story of a
high-spirited, headstrong woman who was proud of her successes,
unabashed by her failures, and the architect of her own
legend.
Florence "Pancho" Barnes was a California heiress who inherited a
love of flying from her grandfather, a pioneer balloonist in the
Civil War. Faced with a future of domesticity and upper-crust
pretensions, she ran away from her responsibilities as wife and
mother to create her own life. She cruised South America. She
trekked through Mexico astride a burro. She hitchhiked halfway
across the United States. Then, in the late 1920s, she took to the
skies, one of a handful of female pilots.
She was a barnstormer, a racer, a cross-country flier, and a
Hollywood stunt pilot. She was, for a time, "the fastest woman on
earth," flying the fastest civilian airplane in the world. She was
an intimate of movie stars, a script doctor for the great director
Erich von Stroheim, and, later in life, a drinking buddy of the
supersonic jet jockey Chuck Yeager. She ran a wild and wildly
successful desert watering hole known as the Happy Bottom Riding
Club, the raucous bar and grill depicted in The Right Stuff.
In The Happy Bottom Riding Club, Lauren Kessler presents a
portrait, both authoritative and affectionate, of a woman who
didn't play by women's rules, a woman of large
appetites--emotional, financial, and sexual--who called herself
"the greatest conversation piece that ever existed."
|
商品评论(0条)