MY FAVORITE THINGS
Susan Butler's East to the Dawn, an excellent biography with some interesting speculation about Earhart's love life and last days.
Pam Munoz Ryan's Amelia and Eleanor Go For a Ride, a wonderful book for children about two icons of American history -- Earhart and the First Lady she taught to fly.
Corinne Szabo's Sky Pioneer, another superb book for young people with dozens of illustrations that adult fans of Earhart will want.
Mary S. Lovell's The Sound of Wings, a very readable biography, though more derivative than Butler's.
Doris L. Rich's Amelia Earhart : A Biography, an older look at the life and legend of the independent feminist heroine.
Donald M. Goldstein and Katherine V. Dillon's Amelia : A Life of the Aviation Legend, balancing the fame of her life against the hundreds of stories about her demise.
Jane Mendelsohn's I Was Amelia Earhart; not the ending I would have chosen for Amelia, but a lovely read nonetheless.
Elgen and Marie Long's Amelia Earhart: The Mystery Solved, in which an aviator ponders the mystery of Earhart's disappearance.
Thomas F. King et al's Amelia Earhart's Shoes: Is the Mystery Solved?, which of course it isn't, in this book or the previous one, but the authors have an entertaining tone and speculative ambitions certain to entertain readers.
Leslie Haynsworth and David M. Toomey's Amelia Earhart's Daughters, a history of American women aviators from World War II to the space age, full of inspiring stories of heroines of the air.
Amelia Earhart's The Fun Of It, the pilot's own words on the joy of flying and other pilots she admired.
WICCA - GODDESS
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