Laurie Gwen Shapiro

Laurie Gwen Shapiro

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Few figures loom larger in aviation history than Amelia Earhart. Yet after hundreds of books, countless documentaries, and nearly a century of speculation, how much do we actually know about the woman behind the legend? In this episode, Laurie Gwen Shapiro talks about her bestselling book, The Aviator and the Showman. Drawing on newly digitized interviews, archival discoveries, and years of research, Laurie argues that the real mystery of Amelia Earhart isn’t what happened to her at the end of her final flight—it’s understanding who she was as a person.

We explore Earhart’s journey from social worker and hobby pilot to international celebrity, the complicated role publisher and promoter George Palmer Putnam played in her fame, and the tension between aviation skill, public image, and advocacy. We also discuss the extraordinary ways Earhart used her platform to champion both aviation and women’s rights.

Along the way, we venture into the world of some of Earhart’s remarkable contemporaries, including Eleanor Smith, Louise Thaden, Lady Mary Heath, Bessie Coleman, and Jackie Cochran. We also talk about the challenges—and rewards—of writing history that is deeply researched, rigorously sourced, and unafraid to embrace the complexity of its subjects.

Whether you’re a lifelong Amelia Earhart enthusiast or someone who has wondered why she continues to captivate the public imagination nearly a century later, I think you’ll find this conversation both thought-provoking and illuminating. And if you’re a writer hoping to dig into a different historical mystery, you’ll learn from Laurie’s expertise as an author, journalist, and professor of journalism.

Some links we discuss in the episode:

NASM Amelia Earhart Project Recordings

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