Saturday, 30 May 2026

31 May: Walt Whitman

Walt Whitman, the American poet dubbed the “Bard of Democracy” was born on this date in 1819. 10 facts about him:

  1. He was born in West Hills, New York to Quaker farmers Walter Whitman and Louisa Van Velsor. He was the second of nine children and given the name Walter Whitman Junior. From the start, he was called Walt in order to distinguish him from his father.

  2. The Whitmans weren’t well off, so Walt left school at the age of 11 to help support the family. He started as an assistant to a law firm but moved on to learn the printing trade. He continued his own education in his spare time and at 17 became a teacher.

  3. His most famous work is Leaves of Grass, which he self-published in 1855 as a collection of 12 poems. He would continue tinkering with it for the rest of his life, adding more poems and changing the order and the typesetting, so there were many editions. The final one, towards the end of his life, contained more than 400 poems. The title was not inspired by botany so much as writing and publishing. He intended “Leaves” to mean the pages of a book and “Grass” as something close to worthless. Essentially, “Pages of Rubbish”.

  4. His other works include a novel, Franklin Evans, or The Inebriate, published in 1842. It was what was known as a temperance novel, one in which the whole point of the story was to highlight the evils of drink. This was a cause he supported in his youth, but in later life did enjoy fine wines and champagnes. He also claimed to be somewhat embarrassed by the novel, calling it "damned rot" which he had written purely for the money, while he was drunk!

  5. He never married and had no obvious children. That, and some of his Poetry, plus the fact he had some intense friendships with other men, led to the belief he was probably gay, although he did have at least one romantic relationship with a woman, and claimed that he had fathered six illegitimate children, although this has never been proved. Later in his life, Oscar Wilde paid him a visit and afterwards commented "I have the kiss of Walt Whitman still on my lips," although what Oscar actually meant by that is not entirely clear.

  6. He was a bit of a fitness freak and even wrote articles about health and wellbeing for the New York Atlas in the 1850s under the pen name “Mose Velsor”. He advised brisk walks, frequent bathing, and growing a Beard as a barrier to germs. He was also a nudist and once said, “Nature was naked, and I was also.”

  7. Bram Stoker of Dracula fame was a big fan. Stoker wrote Whitman a fan letter which was somewhat fawning and self-deprecating, which he hid in a drawer for ages before drumming up the courage to post it. The two writers ended up as regular pen pals, and Stoker has said that Dracula was at least partially based on Whitman.

  8. He also wrote a mystery novel called The Life and Adventures of Jack Engle, which was serialised in a newspaper and then hidden away in the archives until 2017 when it was re-discovered by Whitman historian Zach Turpin, who got it published as a book. This is despite Whitman being totally against people “dredging up” his old works and publishing them, even going so far as to threaten to shoot anyone who did so. However, by this time he’d been dead for 125 years, so presumably Turpin didn’t feel threatened by him simply spinning in his grave.

  9. A crater on Mercury is named for him.

  10. Before he died at the age of 72, he designed his own tomb, a granite mausoleum shaped like a house. His admirers chipped in to make his monument a reality and it stands at his grave to this day.




I also write novels and short stories. If you like superheroes, psychic detectives and general weirdness you might enjoy them. 
Check out my works of fiction at https://juliehowlinauthor.wordpress.com/my-books/

Friday, 29 May 2026

30 May: Buckets

Today is My Bucket's Got A Hole In It Day. To celebrate, 10 facts about buckets.

  1. Why is today My Bucket's Got A Hole In It Day, anyway? Apparently, it’s a commemoration of the comedy song There's a Hole in My Bucket in which a character called Henry complains to another character called Liza that his bucket has a hole in it. Liza tells him to fix it. Henry, it has to be said, isn’t the sharpest knife in the drawer. Or perhaps he’s just trying to get out of doing any work. “With what do I fix it?” he asks. “A straw,” says Liza. The straw is too long. So cut it. With what? A knife. But the knife is dull. So sharpen it. With what? With a stone. But the stone is too dry. So wet it. With what? Duh. Water, of course (although in a NSFW version perhaps Liza could suggest he pees on it). Ah, but in what do I fetch the water, Liza? In a bucket. But…

  2. What’s the difference between a bucket and a pail? In everyday parlance, the words are used interchangeably, but technically, a bucket is a container with a wide opening at the top and a handle, used for carrying things, while a pail is for shipping things and has a lid.

  3. Buckets have been used for thousands of years. Sculptures dating from around 3200 BC show Pharaoh Narmer with a servant carrying a bucket.

  4. Early buckets were made from animal skins. They can be made of wood, metal or plastic.

  5. Sometimes, buckets have sacred uses. Sculptures from Assyria-Babylonia and the Olmecs from Mexico show deities and priests holding buckets of water to be sprinkled using a pine cone. More recently, when a Catholic person died, people would bring holy water from the church in a special bucket to sprinkle on the corpse.

  6. This custom is one of the suggested theories to explain the term “kick the bucket” meaning to die (or d*e or be unalived on social media where any word pertaining to death apparently has to be censored). Other theories suggest it started with hanging, where the condemned criminal or suicidal person stood on a bucket with the noose round their neck, and it would then be kicked away. Or it might come from an old word for a beam on which Pigs were slaughtered. Or from the idea of a Goat which kicks over the bucket after it’s been milked, signifying a bad ending.

  7. No prizes for guessing that this is where the term “bucket list” comes from, meaning a wish list of things a person wants to achieve before the end of their life, or before they kick the bucket. In 2007 the term was used as the title of a film directed and produced by Rob Reiner and starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman as two terminally ill men who take a road trip in order to complete their bucket lists.

  8. There was once, allegedly, a war fought over a bucket. The War of the (Oaken) Bucket was fought in 1325 between two rival city-states in Italy, Bologna and Modena. The story goes that it started when the Modenese stole a bucket from a Bolognese well. Sadly, it’s just a myth. If anything, the bucket wasn’t taken until the end of the battle, when it was taken as a trophy by the victorious Modenese.

  9. There’s an obsolete measurement called a bucket, which is 4 imperial gallons (18 L; 4.8 US gal).

  10. Occasionally, writers have named their characters after buckets. Charles Dickens created Inspector Bucket, a central character in Bleak House. Roald Dahl named the protagonist of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Charlie Bucket, and of course, there’s Hyacinth Bucket, the main character in Keeping Up Appearances, who insists it’s pronounced “bouquet”. Finally, "Buckethead" is the stage name of American rock guitar player Brian Patrick Carroll.





I also write novels and short stories. If you like superheroes, psychic detectives and general weirdness you might enjoy them. 
Check out my works of fiction at https://juliehowlinauthor.wordpress.com/my-books/

Thursday, 28 May 2026

29 May: John F Kennedy Quotes

Born on this date in 1917 was American President John F Kennedy. 10 quotes from him:

  1. My fellow Americans, ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.

  2. Ask not that the journey be easy; ask instead that it be worth it.

  3. Things do not happen. Things are made to happen.

  4. Show me a man with a great golf game, and I’ll show you a man who has been neglecting something.

  5. Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.

  6. Lets talk to one another instead of about one another.

  7. Don't pray for an easy life, pray to be a stronger man.

  8. We are not here to curse the darkness, but to light the candle that can guide us through that darkness to a safe and sane future.

  9. Forgive your enemies, but never forget their names.

  10. Don't ask 'Why', ask instead, 'Why not'.





I also write novels and short stories. If you like superheroes, psychic detectives and general weirdness you might enjoy them. 
Check out my works of fiction at https://juliehowlinauthor.wordpress.com/my-books/

Wednesday, 27 May 2026

28 May: William Joyce/Lord Haw Haw

William Joyce, aka Lord Haw Haw, famous traitor of the second world war, was captured on this date in 1945. 10 facts about him.

  1. He was born in America, in New York City on April 26th, 1906, but only lived there until he was three. His parents were of Irish origin and the family moved to Galway, where Joyce grew up.

  2. He was almost assassinated by the IRA as a schoolboy. In 1921, during the Irish War of Independence, he was recruited by the British Army as a courier and an attempt was made on his life on his way home from school. This is how he ended up in England – the British army sent him to Worcestershire for his safety.

  3. He became fascinated by fascism as a student, but the die was cast when he attended a political meeting and was attacked there by communists. The attack left a permanent scar from his earlobe to the corner of his mouth. This cemented his dedication to the right wing.

  4. He joined Oswald Mosley’s British Union of Fascists in 1932 and did well there at first due to his skills at public speaking. Things went sour, though, and Mosley fired him. Furious, he split off from the BUF to found his own political party, the National Socialist League. Again, things went sour as he wanted to model the party on the German Nazi party which was too much even for the NSL. So Joyce disbanded the party and went to Germany in 1939. He’d obtained a British passport in 1938 by falsely claiming he was a British subject when he was actually an American citizen.

  5. He was recruited by Joseph Goebbels’ Ministry of Propaganda and given his own radio show, “Germany Calling.” Joyce was actually one of several English announcers on that show who were dubbed “Lord Haw Haw”.

  6. At first, people in Britain found his broadcasts dissing the government quite entertaining in contrast to the rather dour programmes on the BBC. By 1940, it was estimated that “Germany Calling” had six million regular listeners and 18 million occasional listeners in the United Kingdom. A regular feature of his show was a segment called “Schmidt and Smith” in which he and a German colleague would engage in discussions about Britain, degrading and attacking the British government, people, and way of life. 

  7. Joyce was doing so well that he was given a pay raise and promoted to Chief Commentator of the English Language Service. However, when Nazi Germany invaded DenmarkNorway, and France in April and May of 1940, Joyce’s propaganda was notched up a gear. Now he was bigging up Germany, threatening Britain with invasion, and urged the country to surrender. He’d crossed a line, now, and the British public no longer saw his show as harmless satire but as an actual threat. Joyce’s constant contempt for and sarcasm about Britain no longer went down well and his efforts to undermine British morale were largely ineffective.

  8. On 28 May 1945, Joyce was captured by British forces at Flensburg, the last capital of the Third Reich. Soldiers out gathering firewood spotted him, a dishevelled figure by now, and tried to start a conversation. They didn’t know who he was, at first, and attempted to communicate in French as well as English. When he spoke back, of course, they recognised his voice and asked if he was William Joyce. Joyce reached into his pocket for his fake British passport, which the soldiers interpreted as him reaching for a gun. One of them, Geoffrey Perry, reacted fast, and shot Joyce in the bum. Two intelligence officers then drove Joyce to a border post to hand him over to British military police.

  9. He was found guilty of high treason at the Old Bailey and was hanged at Wandsworth Prison on 3 January 1946, aged 39. He was the penultimate person to be hanged in the UK for a crime other than murder. The last was Theodore Schurch, executed for treachery the following day at Pentonville.

  10. Joyce was married twice. His first wife was called Hazel with whom he had a daughter, Heather. When that marriage ended, she re-married and her new husband was Oswald Mosley's bodyguard, Eric Piercey. His second wife was Margaret Cairns White. He married her in 1936 and she went with him to Germany. Joyce’s daughter, Heather, would as an adult speak about him and campaigned to get his body moved from an unmarked grave in Wandsworth to Galway. She condemned the work he did for Nazi Germany, but said that he was nevertheless a loving father to her.




I also write novels and short stories. If you like superheroes, psychic detectives and general weirdness you might enjoy them. 
Check out my works of fiction at https://juliehowlinauthor.wordpress.com/my-books/

Tuesday, 26 May 2026

27 May: Imagine

On this date in 1971, John Lennon began recording Imagine.

  1. It didn’t take him long to write. The song was mostly completed in one sitting at Lennon’s home at Tittenhurst Park, one morning in early 1971.

  2. The song was inspired by two books. One was a book of poetry called Grapefruit, written in 1964 by his wife, Yoko Ono. One of the poems, Cloud Piece, contained the line "Imagine the clouds dripping, dig a hole in your garden to put them in." The other book was a Christian prayer book he’d been given as a gift.

  3. Lennon admitted he’d largely got the idea from Yoko, but didn’t acknowledge that at the time because he was “was a bit more selfish, a bit more macho” and took all the credit himself. On June 14, 2017, the National Music Publishers' Association announced that Yoko Ono would be added as a songwriter for Imagine.

  4. Two Pianos were used for the composition. Both were Steinways: a brown Model Z upright in Lennon's studio and a white baby grand in one of the rooms of his estate. Film footage shows Lennon first writing the song on the upright, then working it out on the grand. The upright piano was sold to George Michael in 2000. Michael donated it to The Beatles Museum in Liverpool. It has since been "on tour" around the world to promoting peace. Lennon had the grand shipped to New York, where it is presumably still in the possession of Yoko Ono.

  5. When he first wrote the song, Lennon didn’t see it as a huge hit. Rather, he saw it as the B side of another song called Gimme Some Truth. In fact, he made a rough demo recording in just that arrangement. When he started playing the songs to other people, however, they had to convince Lennon that Imagine was the hit.

  6. It has been suggested that there are backwards messages in the song. If the line "imagine all the people" is played backwards, some claimed, it came out as "people war beside me".

  7. Ben & Jerry's produced an Ice cream flavour based on Imagine between 2007 and 2013. It was called "Imagine Whirled Peace" and was a Caramel ice cream mixed with Toffee cookie pieces and Chocolate peace signs.

  8. It has been covered many times by artists such as Elton John, Queen, David Bowie, Stevie Wonder, Neil Young, Peter Gabriel, Joan Baez, Diana Ross, Madonna and Lady Gaga. During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Lennon's son Julian covered it, calling on world leaders and everyone who believes in the song's sentiment of hope and peace to stand up for refugees. Oasis used the piano intro on their 1996 song Don't Look Back In Anger. Imagine is often played at Olympic opening ceremonies, including the 1996 Atlanta Games, London in 2012, Tokyo in 2021, and Paris in 2024.

  9. In the film Forrest Gump, Forrest appears on a talk show with Lennon, talking about a place where there are "no possessions" and "no religion." It's implied that Gump gave Lennon the idea for the song.

  10. In New York’s Central Park, there is a sidewalk mosaic which spells out the word "Imagine". It’s in a section of the park which is dedicated to John Lennon. The area is called Strawberry Fields, across from Lennon's apartment where he was shot.




I also write novels and short stories. If you like superheroes, psychic detectives and general weirdness you might enjoy them. 
Check out my works of fiction at https://juliehowlinauthor.wordpress.com/my-books/

Monday, 25 May 2026

26 May: 146

Today is day 146 of the year. 10 fun facts about this number.

  1. 146 Lucina is a main-belt Asteroid discovered by Alphonse Borrelly in 1875, and named after Lucina, the Roman goddess of childbirth.

  2. London Bus 146 runs between Bromley North Station and Downe Church.

  3. Room 146 is a 2021 short film directed by Ricardo Garcia and starring Victorian Keaton, Taylor Paral and Richard Rivera. It’s about an FBI agent looking for a domestic terrorist.

  4. Firefox 146 was released on December 9, 2025.

  5. The Alfa Romeo 146 is a small family car produced by Italian car manufacturer Alfa Romeo between 1994 and 2000.

  6. The A146 is a road in England that connects Norwich in Norfolk and Lowestoft in Suffolk.

  7. The year 146 was a common year starting on a Friday. It was known at the time as the Year of the Consulship of Clarus and Severus. In this year, Faustina the Younger became Roman Empress.

  8. Psalm 146 begins “Praise the Lord. Praise the Lord, my soul. I will praise the Lord all my life; I will sing praise to my God as long as I live.” (New International Version).

  9. 146 is an octahedral number, that is, the number of spheres that can be packed into in a regular octahedron with six spheres along each edge.

  10. 146 resonates with the idea of relationships — companionship and coexistence. People under its influence are great team workers, but are self sufficient enough to go it alone when necessary.





I also write novels and short stories. If you like superheroes, psychic detectives and general weirdness you might enjoy them. 
Check out my works of fiction at https://juliehowlinauthor.wordpress.com/my-books/

Sunday, 24 May 2026

25 May: Yoda

There are three reasons to present ten facts about Yoda today. Firstly, it’s the birthday of Frank Oz, the puppeteer who played him. Secondly, it’s the anniversary of the day Star Wars was first shown in 1977, and thirdly, the anniversary of the day The Return of the Jedi, opened in the US in 1983.

  1. That said, Yoda wasn’t in the first Star Wars film, but made his first appearance in The Empire Strikes Back. Which was initially going to be his only appearance. George Lucas envisaged him training Luke and then vanishing back into obscurity on his swamp planet. However, in pre-production of Return of the Jedi a child psychologist advised that kids under 12 wouldn't accept the twist that Darth Vader is Luke’s father unless it was made a lot clearer. Yoda was the character chosen to confirm Luke’s parentage.

  2. Yoda could have been very different from the little Green creature we’re all familiar with, based on some of Lucas’s early ideas. He could have ended up as a massively tall, bearded Blue creature called Buffy, wearing a silly hat. Or he could have been portrayed on screen by a Monkey in a Yoda mask.

  3. Having been talked out of calling the character Buffy, Lucas suggested "Minch Yoda", but in the end decided he should have just the one name as that would add to the mystery. Yoda was chosen because it sounded Eastern and mystical. He may or may not have known that Yoda is Sanskrit for warrior. Another character in the Star Wars universe ended up with the name Minch.

  4. Likewise, Lucas made the conscious decision not to reveal what species Yoda is or where he originally came from, and says that he doesn’t even know himself.

  5. There are at least two other members of Yoda’s species that have appeared in the Star Wars Universe, though. There’s a female Yoda who sits on a Jedi council although she isn’t shown speaking. She has longer hair and is called Yaddle. Baby Yoda is not actually Yoda but another member of the same species whose real name is Grogu.

  6. Actors who have voiced Yoda are Tom Kane, John Lithgow, Peter McConnell, Piotr Michael, Tony Pope, and of course, Frank Oz. Frank Oz wasn’t Lucas’s first choice to voice the character; perhaps, given that Oz was the voice of various Muppets including Miss Piggy, he feared Yoda might sound too much like a Muppet! He came around in the end, though, and even tried to get Oz nominated for the Best Supporting Actor Oscar. However, the Academy deemed that a puppeteer wasn’t an actor and therefore could not be nominated in that capacity.

  7. Yoda’s speech pattern is more than an affectation to make him sound alien. Some researchers believe that all human languages evolved from such a pattern, and is commonly a stage in human children’s language development.

  8. Yoda was born in 896 BBY (Before the Battle of Yavin) and died in 4 ABY (After the Battle of Yavin). That made him 900 years old when he died. He is is 66cm tall and weighs 17kg and was trained by Jedi Master N’Kata Del Gormo.

  9. "Weird Al" Yankovic recorded a song about Yoda in 1980. Called simply Yoda, it was a parody of the song Lola by the Kinks.

  10. In 2012, scientists discovered a new species of worm that lives one and a half miles under the surface of the Atlantic Ocean. This creature has large lips on either side of its head, which reminded the scientists of Yoda’s ears. So they named the creature Yoda purpurata.






I also write novels and short stories. If you like superheroes, psychic detectives and general weirdness you might enjoy them. 
Check out my works of fiction at https://juliehowlinauthor.wordpress.com/my-books/