Footeprint, the progress

I’m about halfway through my latest series about Eunice Foote. It’s been a fantastic joy to make the series. Why?

John Perlin of the Physics Department at the University of California in Santa Barbara conducted research on Eunice Newton Foote and wrote an as-yet-unpublished scientific biography about her. I learned about his work from the Washington Post and reached out to him. He was happy to help with my project. Now, we have online meetings every other week where he tells me more about Eunice Foote. This information is especially helpful for the painting I’m working on.

Perlin is kind enough to make time for this again and again, and it is a very nice way for me to learn more about her life. He not only knows everything about Eunice but also about all kinds of related matters that took place at that time and in that place. Without him, this project would not have been possible. I am eternally grateful to him.

I’m making a small ebook of this project myself, but I hope Perlin’s manuscript about Eunice (which is way more interesting, detailed and extensive than my small ebook) will be published (internationally) soon. Because such a beauty of a story deserves a place on your bookshelf, doesn’t it?

Curious publishers can contact me (or contact John directly of course)