“A dart ... dipped in Rajaijah juice ... the poison of madness ... poor chap ... he just had time to tell me I’m needed in Shanghai,” says Tintin, the hero of “The Blue Lotus” and 22 other comic book adventures created by Belgian artist Georges Remi (who wrote as Herge) between 1929 and 1983.
-- Susan Spano
Read more: For this cartoon hero, life is a fantastic journey
Upper photo: The Stockel Metro stop in Brussels
Lower photo credit: Jacques DeMarthon / AFP / Getty Images (Herwig Vergult / AFP / Getty Images)
It wasn’t until later that I realized U.C. was
-- Susan Spano
Read more: Getting to know an adventurer you wouldn’t dare call ‘Mrs. Hemingway’
Upper photo: Ernest Hemingway Home & Museum in Key West,
Lower photo credit: L.A. Library (Rob O’Neal / AFP / Getty Images)
“Miss Rumphius,” my favorite book about travel, was written and illustrated by Barbara Cooney in 1982. You seldom find it in the travel sections at libraries, though, because it is a children’s book about a woman born in Brooklyn at the end of the last century who travels, by herself, all over the world.
Miss Rumphius, named after a 17th century Dutch naturalist, climbs mountains, crosses jungles and deserts and makes friends wherever she goes -- Bapa Raja, for example, the ruler of a village on the Indonesian island of Ambon, who gives her a beautiful shell and tells her, “You will always remain in my heart.”
-- Susan Spano
Read more: In the footsteps of ‘Miss Rumphius,’ an inspiration to solo women travelers
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Then came her first taste of proper French food: briny portugaises oysters with rye bread, followed by Dover sole in butter sauce and a simple green salad. Julia felt guilty about drinking wine at lunch -- a crisp, white, Loire Valley Pouilly Fume. They had fromage blanc for dessert and espresso.
“It was the most exciting meal of my life,” she wrote in “My Life in France.”
-- Susan Spano
Read more: Touring culinary Paris with Julia Child as your guide
Upper photo: The Eiffel Tower
Lower photo: Julia Child circa 1978. Credit: James Scherer / Business Wire (Muhammed Muheisen / Associated Press)
-- Susan Spano
Read more: On the trail of Georgia O’Keeffe
Upper photo: The sandstone cliffs near Georgia O’Keeffe’s home at Ghost Ranch, N.M. Lower photo: O¹Keeffe at her home in Ghost Ranch, N.M., in 1961. Credit: Todd Webb / Courtesy of the Estate of Todd and Lucille Webb (Susan Montoya Bryan / Associated Press)