And this big, fluffy feather skirt of Karina's this week--It. Will. Be. Mine. RWA conference 2010 is going to be Feather Skirt Time.



This weekend we'll look at one of my favorite poets, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, since the anniversary of her elopement with Robert Browning was last weekend! (They married in 1846).
In 1838, at her doctor's advice, Elizabeth went to live for a time at Torquay along with her brother Edward. His death by drowning there in 1840 sent her into a terrible downward spiral, and she returned to Wimpole Street as an invalid and recluse, kept company mostly by her beloved spaniel Flush. She kept writing, though, and in 1844 two volumes were published, A Drama of Exile, a Vision of Poets and Lady Geraldine's Courtship. These volumes made her one of the most popular writers of the time and inspired Robert Browning to write her a fan letter. Kenyon arranged for them to meet in May 1845, and thus began the most famous courtship in literary history.
Olivia Wilde: I can't figure this one out. It's--not good, especially the big zipper in illusion netting up the back. But it's not boring.
Tina Fey: Now this is okay, but it IS boring.
Sandra Oh: Glamorous!
Padma Lakshmi: Oh, Padma. You are Padma Lakshmi, one of the most gorgeous people on the planet! There is no excuse for this unflattering dress.
Elisabeth Moss: No.
Mila Kunis: I love this dark-ballerina dress, and wouldn't mind having one for myself! My second-favorite look of the night.
January Jones: My first-favorite look of the night! Different and sexy without being bizarre and slutty. Yay Betty Draper!
Heidi Klum: Gorgeous, of course, but how is it staying up?
Blake Lively and Leighton Meester: Will someone please help these poor girls?? Blake Lively, see my Padma comments--you are Blake Lively, winner of the genetic lottery, for heaven's sake! You do not need to show up on every red carpet always wearing slutting-looking dresses a size too small and 30 years too old. And Leighton, that dress is also too old (and too big) for you. You are the Gossip Girls!!!!
Drew Barrymore: This is a very pretty gown, but the Go Fug Yourself-ers had it dead-right when they said it's too much like a pale imitation of the very dramatic and memorable gown Penelope Cruz wore to the Oscars a couple of years ago
Chloe Sevigny: Surprisingly pretty!









One thing I love about doing these "heroine weekends" is finding out about extraordinary women I knew nothing about before. (Plus finding inspiration for future heroines in my own books!) This weekend we look at Sarah Frances Whiting, who died on this day in 1927 and was a pioneer for women in science in the United States.
In 1877, Durant introduced her to Professor Edward Pickering at MIT and director of Harvard's Observatory. He invited her to MIT to observe the undergrad physics lab there and attend physics lectures (which were otherwise closed to women). She went on to use this information to establish, equip, and operate a physics lab at Wellesley, the only lab of its kind for women in the US. In 1879, she went to inspect the Harvard Observatory, which was being used for astronomical investigations (particularly in the field of spectroscopy, which allowed for the observation of the patterns of spectra--lines and bands--that form when light is sent through a prism). This inspired her to integrate astronomy into the Wellesley curriculum. She created and taught the first course in 1880 under the title "Applied Physics." She also set herself the large task of having an observatory installed at the college, with the fundraising help of Wellesley trustee Mrs. John C. Whittin. The Whitin Observatory was built by converting an old organ loft on the fifth floor of College Hall, and it was opened in 1900 (with Whiting again designing and ordering the equipment herself).
I'm also at the Riskies today, talking about the mystery of the death of Amy Robsart...










