Moon Staff blog
About this blog
The Moon Water Cooler is a place for Moon staffers to share what's new in their world. Check back often to hear about author events, book releases, travel trends, and maybe even some staff recommendations for what part of the world to explore next.
Recent Posts
- St. Patrick’s Day 2010
- Romantic City Giveaway Winner Announced
- Celebrating Black History Month 2010
- Romantic Weekend Ski Getaway
- Guest Post: The Caribbean's Top Five Romantic Resorts
- Tell Us, What's the Most Romantic City in the World?
- See Moon, Win Moon!
- Time Travel
- Moon is Now on Twitter!
- Giving Vegas a Second Chance
- The Growing Trend of Moving Abroad
- Ready to Fly Giveaway Winner
- Guest Post: Brazil's Ten Best Secluded Getaway Beaches
- Top-Ten Budget Travel Destinations for 2010
- Dreaming of a New Zealand Christmas

Time Travel
"In the early hours of a smoky morning as we sat reading in the cabin of a ferry, a sudden shriek from our whistle, followed by a succession of piercing toots brought us to our feet to see what disaster was pending, when behold, close at hand lay the Japan steamer, Oceanic, with a tug at her side receiving on board a small piece of woman-hood which then sped away for the Oakland mole, where a special train awaited the arrival of Nelly [sic] Bly."
—Susie Champney Clark, The Round Trip from the Hub to the Golden Gate (1890)
I've just stumbled across one of the best pieces of alternative 'armchair travel' I've encountered in a long time. The Library of Congress' American Memory archives posts a "Today in History" section with historical facts, images, and bits of narrative text. Combined, they offer a daily often-nostalgic glimpse into the sights, sounds, and travels of decades past — today's entry, for example, follows the 1889–1890 round-the-world journey of young reporter Nellie Bly.
International travel was very much a luxury for most Americans at the turn of the 20th century, when such excursions were a privilege available only to the elite. The everyday person would have considered travel a distant dream — a feeling to which many of us can relate these days. I imagine the stories and photographs published in newspapers serving a similar purpose as something like the Travel Channel does now, giving us a window out of our own everyday, and the hope of faraway adventures to come.
Sarah Juckniess
Marketing Services Manager
Image: "distant view of harbor approach", William Henry Jackson, photographer, 1843–1942. Courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division.
