Aloha Wanderwell
The Border-Smashing, Record-Setting Life of the World's Youngest Explorer
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Narrateur(s):
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Jo Ayres
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Auteur(s):
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Christian Fink-Jensen
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Randolph Eustace-Walden
À propos de cet audio
The story of the Guinness World Record Holder of the First Woman to Drive Around the World
In 1922, a 16-year-old Canadian girl, fed up with life in a French convent school, answered an ad for a travelling secretary. Tall, blonde, and swaggering with confidence, she might have passed for twenty. She also knew what she wanted: to become the first female to drive around the world. Her name was Aloha Wanderwell.
By the age of 25, she had become a pilot, a film star, an ambassador for world peace, and the centerpiece of one of the biggest unsolved murder mysteries in California history. Her story defied belief, but it was true. Every bit of it. Except for her name. The American Aloha Wanderwell was raised in Canada as Idris Hall.
Drawing upon Aloha’s diaries and travel logs, as well as films, photographs, newspaper accounts, and previously classified government documents, Aloha Wanderwell reveals the astonishing story of one of the greatest—and most outrageous—explorers of the 1920s.
©2016 Christian Fink-Jensen and Randolph Eustace-Walden (P)2023 Goose Lane EditionsCe que les critiques en disent
“Fink-Jensen and Eustace-Walden have compiled a remarkable biography about the exploits of a young Canadian woman and the charismatic man who guided her early career. In rescuing Aloha’s life from obscurity, they have reintroduced her as a significant and accomplished historical actor who was both a product and a purveyor of her times.”—Bonnie Reilly Schmidt, BC Bookworld
“Aloha Wanderwell recounts over a decade of non-stop adventure (along tens of thousands of kilometres of “barely existing roads” on several continents). All told, it’s an impressive feat.”—Brett Josef Grubisic, Toronto Star
“Aloha Wanderwell must surely be the most remarkable woman adventurer to remain virtually unknown to history. This marvellous book sets the record straight, even as it powerfully evokes a distant era of travel when the survivors of the Great War set out to go anywhere but home.”—Wade Davis, author of The Lost Amazon and The Serpent and the Rainbow