The
Ruby Slippers, Madonna's Bra, and Einstein's
Brain
I remember looking at the
test tube that purportedly contains Thomas
Edison's last breath. It's on display in a
case in the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn,
Michigan. And if you're wondering, as I was,
how whoever collected it knew that it would
be the great inventor's terminal exhalation,
the placard explains. Edison's son collected
several of his father's dying breaths, and
gave the final one to his best friend Henry
Ford.
Okay, it's just a Plexiglas test
tube. The air inside is invisible, and no
one will ever be completely sure it was ever
drawn into Thomas Edison's lungs. It doesn't
matter. The display itself is what arouses
interest and connects us to the intellect
that so fundamentally shaped our modern world.
Chris Epting's newest book, The
Ruby Slippers, Madonna's Bra, and Einstein's
Brain, is a treasure trove of such marvels.
Well known for his guides to the locations
of pop culture events (James
Dean Died Here, Marilyn
Monroe Dyed Here, and Elvis
Presley Passed Here), Epting has this
time tracked down the locations of hundreds
of artifacts, mementos, and structures associated
with the people and events of America's popular
history. From the lantern Paul Revere used
to warn colonists that the British were coming
to Elton John's platform shoes, this book
is both a guide for those who would actually
like to stand in the presence of significant
souvenirs as well as those who enjoy reading
about all the weird and wonderful stuff preserved
inside museums and along roadsides across
the continent...[More]