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Date: | Mon, 24 Nov 2014 13:41:07 -0500 |
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Interesting that you (David Antonucci) also received an email with an
unknown "handle", because the email from S-S to me was also accusatory, asking
why I ignored the balloon voyage. It did not take me long to find the
article in question: During the 2,500 hours of Internet and library detective
work involved in researching and writing 400 endnotes for the award winning
"Gold Rush Letters of E. Allen and Hosea B. Grosh", I learned a lot of search
tricks, including locations for 1850s-60s publications.
I also determined that Sisu Suku is Finnish, not really translatable but
approximating "devoted to extended family". I assumed a genealogist. I agree:
Is somebody stirring the pot?
Robert E. (Bob) Stewart
Carson City.
In a message dated 11/24/2014 9:32:14 A.M. Pacific Standard Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
I too received an email message from a Sisu Suku. However, the tone of
the communication was accusatory about my book, Fairest Picture =E2=80=93
M=
ark
Twain at Lake Tahoe. The writer insinuated because the Roughing It
balloon voyage passage was a plagiarism; the sketch was false.
Therefore, my research on correlating it to the campsite location was
not correct. The email arrived shortly after I had made a paid
speaking engagement in Carson City in which I described the Roughing
It balloon voyage episode in detail. When I asked the writer for the
plagiarized reference document as proof, I got no response.
According to the hidden AOL header on the email, it originated from a
Charter Communications Internet customer in Carson City, NV. An
in-depth Internet search on the name Sisu Suku revealed no such person
existed in the United States. The person who spoofed the email did not
want their identity known, nor did they wish to share their background
information with me.
I smell a rat.
David C. Antonucci
Author of Fairest Picture - Mark Twain at Lake Tahoe
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