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Underwritten by Stoel Rives LLP
Biography Lecture
Preview by Jay Dickson Working for thirty years as a journalist and travel writer for British newspapers, National Geographic, and other popular periodicals, Winchester has demonstrated his wit and love of quirky details in galloping reports from Asia, the Pacific, and outposts of the British Empire. When not circling the globe, he divides his time between Massachusetts and western Scotland. "He's a superb historian because he's a superb storyteller." Salon Excerpt
from Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded--August 27, 1883: And then
came the moment when a Delft dinner plate fell off a dining-room table
in the old part of Batavia and broke into a thousand pieces. The plate
had belonged to Mrs. van der Stok, a middle-aged Dutch lady who at the
time of its breakageshortly after ten minutes to eleven on the Sunday
morningwas quite probably setting her table for family luncheon.
It had been a part of her trousseau on the day she had married Dr. J.
P. van der Stokthe distinguished scientist from Utrecht who had
brought her out to Batavia some years before on his appointment as director
of the colony's Magnetic and Meteorological Observatory. The couple lived
in a single-story house attached to the observatory, and on that hot and
cloudless Sunday morning both could not help but notice that something,
somewhere, had gone badly awry. Selected
Works A Conversation with Simon Winchester Contemporary Writers: Simon Winchester
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