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ilde Schuurmans was inspired to write Sidney Won’t Swim by her dog, Zaki, who is terrified of water. Believe me, I can relate. I can still remember the moment in swimming class when the teacher pointed at me and commanded, “Float.” But I couldn’t float. Scared and embarrassed, I quit lessons and didn’t learn to swim until I was in college. If only I’d been able to read Sidney Won’t Swim, things might have turned out differently! “Swimming is the dumbest thing in the whole world!” Sidney, a dog of no particular breed, announces the day before swimming lessons are scheduled to begin. Mom tries to reassure him, and asks whether or not he’s just a tiny bit scared.

Nope, declares Sidney. “I just think swimming is dumb.” Sidney makes several attempts to avoid the moment of truth. He comes down with an unexpected tummy ache, conveniently leaves his swimming bag in the classroom and tries to hide so he’ll miss the bus. Still, Sidney won’t admit to his fear.

In the pool locker room, Sidney feels alone. Most of the other kids seem excited about jumping into the pool, but Sidney locks himself into a changing room. When at last he’s coaxed to the pool, he tells Mr. Paul, the swimming teacher, that getting into the water is impossible, because, explains Sidney, “When I get wet, I turn into a huge monster!” Mr. Paul suggests that Sidney sit on the side and watch. But two of Sidney’s friends want to see exactly what kind of monster Sidney will turn into and push him in. Luckily, Mr. Paul is right on the spot. Sidney and his friends learn a valuable lesson in pool safety and at the same time find a creative way to help Sidney begin to conquer his fear of water.

By the end, a happy Sidney is able to shout, “Swimming is fun!” Young readers who feel some trepidation about plunging into the pool themselves will most likely find Hilde Schuurmans’ warm, cartoon-like animal characters reassuring. There’s a rabbit with goggles and (clearly one of the most advanced pupils), a penguin. And who knows? Perhaps if my long-ago swim teacher had been more like Mr. Paul, a large, comforting polar bear, I would have been paddling around in the water a lot sooner.

Deborah Hopkinson eventually learned to swim in Honolulu, where she lived for many years before moving to Walla Walla, Washington.

ilde Schuurmans was inspired to write Sidney Won't Swim by her dog, Zaki, who is terrified of water. Believe me, I can relate. I can still remember the moment in swimming class when the teacher pointed at me and commanded, "Float." But I couldn't float.…
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n the great green room there was a telephone, and a red balloon has signaled bedtime for countless children since the publication of Margaret Wise Brown’s classic Goodnight Moon in 1947. Brown, who never had children of her own, nonetheless understood the intrigue of rhythm and rhyme for young children. From her days of early childhood education at Bank Street College in New York through her career as editor and author, until her untimely death in 1952, she was constantly writing stories and rhymes that appeal to young children. Recently, her younger sister Roberta Brown Rauch has brought forth some of Brown’s manuscripts that had never been published. Noted artist Susan Jeffers was invited to illustrate several of these for a book, and the result is the newly published Love Songs of the Little Bear. In the illustrator’s note at the back, Jeffers describes how the title poem gave her the vision for “a young character, a family, and a setting.” Following that poem, set “one morning in May,” are three others that take Little Bear and readers through the seasons: “Green Song” (summer), “Song of Wind and Rain” (fall), and “Snow Song” (winter).

But this is not simply a visit to the calendar. The happy, loving relationship between mother and child, suggested so warmly on the cover, becomes the impetus for Little Bear’s own exploration and pleasure in the natural world “where the little things creep . . . where the little bugs are all asleep.” Jeffers’ large, full-page pictures have many details that add to the enticing rhymes, such as a goose and a pig for playmates in the rain.

Even though Brown’s poems had presumably not been sufficiently polished for publication, their unusual rhyming schemes are just right for a young child. She understood the lure of repetition of both phrase and sound. In the winter poem, “Snow, snow, slow, slow, in the soft fall of the snow,” she has captured the feeling of quietness and rest. And it is the very feeling a child needs at bedtime! One interesting note we usually think of Brown in connection with rabbits because of Goodnight Moon and The Runaway Bunny. With the publication of Love Songs of the Little Bear, we’ll have to change our thinking.

Etta Wilson loves little children and their books any time of the year.

n the great green room there was a telephone, and a red balloon has signaled bedtime for countless children since the publication of Margaret Wise Brown's classic Goodnight Moon in 1947. Brown, who never had children of her own, nonetheless understood the intrigue of rhythm…
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f you’re looking for a good bedtime story for a child aged three to six, you need look no further. Lyrical and melodic in every way, Eve Merriam’s Low Song is an exemplary illustration of a beautiful lullaby without music. Nevertheless, when read aloud, it offers quiet oscillating harmonies with the cadence of a cradlesong.

The wonder and magic of life are often lost on adults but never on a child. Children have the unique ability to truly “see” their surroundings and appreciate them. Their observant behavior rarely misses the beauty of a spring day or the heightened sense of color in fall foliage. In Low Song the poetic references to sights, sounds, taste, smell and touch add imagination to a child’s daily observations.

Bright, bold and beautiful describe the colorful illustrations by Pam Paparone. A touch of fantasy combined with a brush stoke of reality offer clear and unambiguous depictions of objects and experiences common to a child’s world. Clever images, such as smiling cows painted on the milkman’s milk bottles, add humor to the panoply of color. The vibrant colors used throughout the book reflect the feeling and message of each verse. A rosy pink background for falling snow, a deep blue night for a slumbering giraffe and a bright yellow sky for a cow in clover are certain to catch a child’s attention. Numerous plants, animals and insects are incorporated into various scenes throughout the book offering children ample opportunity to identify familiar objects and learn new ones.

To see the world through the imaginative eyes of a child is indeed a lullaby. Share this sonorous lullaby with your children and marvel at the wonder of it all.

Before her death in 1992, Eve Merriam wrote more than 50 books for children and adults, including The Inner City Mother Goose, illustrated by David Diaz. She won the National Council of Teachers of English Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children. Pam Paparone is the illustrator of several children’s books and her paintings have appeared in many places, including the cover of The New Yorker magazine.

C. Elizabeth Davis is a former marketing director for the education division of Turner Broadcasting System.

f you're looking for a good bedtime story for a child aged three to six, you need look no further. Lyrical and melodic in every way, Eve Merriam's Low Song is an exemplary illustration of a beautiful lullaby without music. Nevertheless, when read aloud, it…
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Anne Perry’s new Victorian murder mystery, Half Moon Street, begins in classic style, with the finding of a body. But this one isn’t in the drawing room of a country mansion; it’s in a small boat drifting against a London dock. It is the body of a man. His hands are manacled, and he is shockingly attired in a woman’s dress.

The constable who finds the body warns our hero, Superintendent Thomas Pitt, the head of the Bow Street Police Station, that scandal is waiting in the wings. He fears the body is that of a missing French diplomat. Soon Pitt is caught up in a tour of the dark underside of Victorian London, trying to find out where the worlds of diplomacy and the theater have crossed paths — and why the encounter ended in murder. The tour is far-ranging and allows the author to paint a mural of the times.

Although Anne Perry is not the only contemporary author to set mystery novels in the foggy, charming days of Sherlock Holmes, nonetheless, she has made the era her own. Because of her chosen milieu, Perry is predictably compared to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Charles Dickens. Actually, although she shares their taste for the grotesque, she lacks their easy humor and writerly sensitivity to language. Her style is plain and straightforward, her emphasis on the social interactions of a busy period.

What amuses Perry is to populate her novels with prominent figures, and give us glimpses inside the lives of the people that made the era so significant in history. In the case of Half Moon Street, they include Oscar Wilde, William Butler Yeats, and some of their illustrious colleagues. The surprising element in these mysteries is that the secondary characters are deeply engaged in social issues and the arts, thereby pulling Pitt into controversies outside the world of crime. For example, when Pitt attends a play, he finds himself immersed in the feminist issues of the day.

These are topics usually overlooked or ignored in period mysteries, and they lend Perry’s books a lively cultural tone. Readers get to experience the pace of a changing world through the eyes of intelligent observers such as Thomas and his wife Charlotte, all while piecing together clues and moving closer to the author’s famously satisfying denouements. It’s a powerful combination and, after two decades, explains Perry’s still-growing reputation.

Anne Perry's new Victorian murder mystery, Half Moon Street, begins in classic style, with the finding of a body. But this one isn't in the drawing room of a country mansion; it's in a small boat drifting against a London dock. It is the body…

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Childhood chores are no longer a bore in Daniel and David Kamish’s new book, Diggy Dan: A room-cleaning adventure. This, the second entertaining title if you haven’t already, you’ve got to see The Night Scary Beasties Popped Out of My Head from father and son team, David (Dad) and Daniel (age 9) Kamish, is pulled straight from a child’s mind, specifically Daniel’s. While Dad David gets credit for writing the stories, it’s little Daniel who draws the incredibly intricate and original illustrations and thinks up ideas for the stories. And with this book, we even see the debut of Mikaela (age 4), Daniel’s little sister, who has joined the family business by drawing some of the animals and backgrounds for her big brother.

Diggy Dan: A room-cleaning adventure stars too-cool-for-words Diggy Dan, who faces everyday childhood challenges with humor, spunk and a vivid imagination. With creativity reminiscent of Maurice Sendak’s Max in the classic Where the Wild Things Are, little Diggie Dan turns the agonizing task of tackling the monumental mess in his room into a fantastical feat.

After being caught trying to sneak out of the house to play on a Saturday morning, Diggie Dan gives his mother a bit of sass. Not a good move. Diggie Dan is then banished to his room, where the only way out is to (aargh!) clean.

But Diggie Dan isn’t your everyday sprucer-upper, putting toys and clothes away in an orderly fashion. Instead, he’s a resourceful, inventive tike who proves that even dull chores like straightening up can be an exciting odyssey. Diggie Dan uses his mess and the constant reprimands from his mother as the inspiration for his fantasies. He becomes an archaeologist, an astronaut, a rock star and a four-star general, among many other creative roles, all the while, experiencing exciting adventures in room grooming.

Brilliantly illustrated and insightfully written, Diggy Dan: A room-cleaning adventure is a true peek into the imaginative world of a child and a glimpse at the fantasies that even a little bit of make-believe can inspire. Not to mention, a clever reminder to parents that even the dullest, grown-up chores can be made into fun adventures, too.

Heidi Henneman is a freelance writer in New York City.

Childhood chores are no longer a bore in Daniel and David Kamish's new book, Diggy Dan: A room-cleaning adventure. This, the second entertaining title if you haven't already, you've got to see The Night Scary Beasties Popped Out of My Head from father and son…

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An amusing stroll through Paris Edmund White, author of A Boy’s Own Story and a landmark biography of Jean Genet, has wandered Paris for 16 years, and seen it as only artists, and voyeurs, can. His The Flaneur: A Stroll Through the Paradoxes of Paris is a langorous intellectual indulgence. If you are willing to succumb, White writes, "You can find not one but several places to go ballroom dancing at five in the afternoon on a Tuesday, say. . . . A slightly nutty friend of mine in his twenties claimed that he used to go to the the dansant every afternoon at a major restaurant on the Boulevard Montparnasse where elderly ladies sent drinks to young gigolos, who then asked them to dance. During a spin across the basement floor, some interesting arrangements were worked out; my friend went home with one dowager and cleaned her apartment wearing nothing but a starched apron and earned a thousand francs." Such offhand entertainments bits of historical curiosity, ruminations, deliberate queerness and quintessential self-exposure are White’s way of wandering through the Paris of his dreams. Part reality, part relativity, his Paris is ancient and ageless, cruel and coquettish. And so is he. He explains l’air du temps trends that are so pervasive that they overwhelm personal taste and good style and proceeds to flout it quietly but with conviction. He wanders St. Germain and the Palais Royale, which brings Colette to mind; he digresses into a character sketch, both acute and accommodating, about that contradictory icon. He takes us from from Josephine Baker to James Baldwin, dinner parties to Dreyfus, anti-Semitism to AIDS, royal crypts to restaurants.

In fact, if this intensely informed and wide-ranging conversational style seems like one huge digression, that is the precisely the point. A flaneur is a voyeur, a wanderer, an observer, a loiterer; his artistry is in observing life and making it his own. Baudelaire says the flaneur’s "passion and creed is to wed the crowd . . . to take up residence in multiplicity, in whatever is seething, moving, evanescent and infinite: You’re not at home, but you feel at home everywhere; you see everyone, you’re at the center of everything yet you remain hidden from everybody." White is walking, wandering, observing, analyzing, selecting and seducing. The only shame is that The Flaneur is such a small book. Happily, this volume is only the first of a series from Bloomsbury called The Writer and the City. At one time, the vins du Paris were all from Champagne; but White is, despite his French literary awards, an American, and so, to honor him and his great Gothic city, I propose Iron Horse, a fine and appropriately iconoclastic California sparkling with a clean, stony undercurrent like that of water running over granite. Although all its sparklings are good, the blanc de blancs is a particular and reliable favorite one of the few ways I will drink California chardonnay anymore and generally available for under $20.

Eve Zibart is a restaurant critic for the Washington Post.

 

An amusing stroll through Paris Edmund White, author of A Boy's Own Story and a landmark biography of Jean Genet, has wandered Paris for 16 years, and seen it as only artists, and voyeurs, can. His The Flaneur: A Stroll Through the Paradoxes of Paris

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This book, part of an excellent series, is for those who have adapted to the Western principles of gardening. The Home Landscaping Series promises to make your particular gardening situation easier because it’s created to suit your regional needs, and it is one of the best this reviewer has ever seen. In Home Landscaping Series: Mid-Atlantic Region by Roger Holmes and Rita Buchanan, many of the questions you have about gardening in your region are answered by offering: beautiful garden designs, illustrations, and photos as well as expert plant selections created by a team of landscape professionals in the region; detailed descriptions of plants used in the designs, as well as advice on their selection and care; step-by-step instructions for garden projects such as paths, walls, patios, fences, trellises, arbors, and small ponds.

All of the books in this series are perfect for first-time home owners and novice gardeners, but more experienced gardeners will find them useful as well. These books consider far more than just winter hardiness zones when making plant recommendations. They address the full range of growing conditions in each region of the United States. In addition to the Mid-Atlantic Region, other books in the series address the Northeast Region (including Southeast Canada); the Southeast Region; and the Great Lakes Region (including Southern Canada). Keep the entire series on your bookshelves . . . you never know when you’ll be moving.

Reviewed by Pat Regel.

This book, part of an excellent series, is for those who have adapted to the Western principles of gardening. The Home Landscaping Series promises to make your particular gardening situation easier because it's created to suit your regional needs, and it is one of the…

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ifestyles of the dead Editor’s note: Each month we see lots of books. Some of the curious arrivals are featured in this space. It must be admitted that occasionally this column stoops to mocking a book. No doubt we will again yield to this righteous urge in the future, but not this month. Although Heaven and Hell and Other Worlds of the Dead, edited by Alison Sheridan, doesn’t deserve mocking, it is very much a curiosity. This 168-page oversize paperback is both informative and entertaining. “What happens after we die?” is Sheridan’s first sentence in the book. She proceeds to document the many, um, inventive ways that human beings have tried to answer this curious question.

Heaven and Hell is handsomely illustrated with color photographs and reproductions of artworks. There are wooden Nigerian staffs associated with reincarnation and Kwakiutl thunderbird masks still being made in the ancestral style. From 15th century Afghani Muslim manuscripts to Tibetan Buddhist temple paintings that reveal less than cheerful forecasts of the afterlife, this book hints that our final rest may not be very restful. Although the remarkable illustrations alone will draw you into the book, essays by Sheridan and other contributors will keep you reading. As far as we know, none of the writers has actually visited either Heaven or Hell, which reminds us of one enduring trait of Homo sapiens: a lack of information never prevents us from having an opinion.

ifestyles of the dead Editor's note: Each month we see lots of books. Some of the curious arrivals are featured in this space. It must be admitted that occasionally this column stoops to mocking a book. No doubt we will again yield to this righteous…
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Sampling a tasty collection Drinking for me means only wine. . . . I believe in wine as I believe in Nature. I cherish its sacramental and legendary meanings, not to mention its power to intoxicate, and just as Nature can be both kind and hostile, so I believe that if bad wine is bad for you, good wine in moderation does nothing but good. This passage, from a short essay called When I Became a Gastronome by journalist Jan Morris, looks back to the meal during which the subtle and intricate force of flavors suddenly broke over her, like an inaugural bottle itself. The meal itself was, as she recalls, nothing elaborate fresh rolls, patŽ of some sort, cheese, I think, apples and a bottle of local white wine. And yet for the first time, Morris, who had always been so sensitive to the undercurrents of cities and cultures and morŽs, was gripped by the voluptuousness of patŽ, the assertive confidence of bread, and the concentrated abundance of wine.

Morris’s piece is one of more than 50 pieces, many published for the first time, in a collection called The Adventure of Food: True Stories of Eating Everything. Collected by Richard Sterling, they include memoirs, magazine articles, semi-fictional musings, and even a few nutritional polemics, most of which take place in foreign countries and which are frequently as intriguing for what they say about Americans abroad as about the foods themselves.

Foods, and drinks, are explored a bit squeamishly by Mary Roach in The Instructress, a rueful recollection of facing down rodent knees and a pre-chewed, fermented manioc brew called chicha prepared by her Amazonian hosts. Or romantically, as in Taras Grescoe’s pursuit of absinthe, the hallucinatory and potentially fatal Green Fairy linked to Toulouse-Lautrec and Oscar Wilde. (That Grescoe slanders Edgar Allan Poe is the piece’s one failing.) Or nostalgically, like Marguerite Thoburn Watkins’s recollection of drinking old-fashioned North Indian Chai in an Unglazed Cup, a eulogy that must have been written prior to the commercialization of chai by American coffee society. Or seductively, as in artist-author Heather Corinna’s prose-poem fantasy, Eat Drink Man Woman ( We describe so very little of what we feast upon when we merely call it food ).

In fact, reading this collection, one is reminded that poetry is in the eye of the consumer. Jonathan Raban discovered this while sailing down the Mississippi River for the book Old Glory. ÔPeople eat squirrels around here?’ I asked.

ÔEat squirrels?’ the old man shouted, banging his stick up and down on the bar floor. ÔWe do not eat squirrels, sir. We may regale ourselves upon them. We might be described, on occasion, as consuming them. We do our humble best to honor the noble squirrel. We make, at the very least, a repast of him.’ One incredibly rich entry (or entree) is the recreation by Michael Paterniti of the illicit last banquet prepared for the terminally ill former French President Francois Mitterrand, the highlight of which was ortolan, a tiny songbird whose consumption had already been outlawed. The entire piece, which originally ran in Esquire, is almost overripe with culinary description, including a fine bit on foie gras; but the description of ortolan, which Paterniti persuades a chef to prepare for him and his girlfriend, is spectacular. The bird is surprisingly soft, gives completely, and then explodes with juices liver, kidneys, lungs. Chestnuts, corn, salt all this in an extraordinary current, the same warm, comforting flood as finely evolved consommŽ. . . . I put inside myself the last flowered bit of air and Armagnac in its lungs, the body of rainwater and berries. In there, too, is the ocean and Africa and the dip and plunge in a high wind. And the heart that bursts between my teeth. This is truly a seductive collection, one that can be grazed in, consumed in large chunks, or nibbled at a course at a time. It could easily be enjoyed with an escalating series of wines, from the aperitif to the sauterne; but in honor of Jan Morris’s epiphany, we recommend Penfolds’s brilliant Koonunga Hill SŽmillon-Chardonnay blends wry, lithe wines with a courteous but not modest balance of acidity and aromatics.

Opening formally with green-apple crispness and a hint of apricot, it gradually softens into a graceful and yet tightly fermented spin of pistachio, balsawood, and secret peach and ends with a low sweep of praline. And although vintages vary slightly, the quality is always dependable and, year after year, the prices a blessed $8 or so give even more meaning to the word sacramental. In fact, I apply it ritually.

Eve Zibart is a restaurant critic for the Washington Post.

Sampling a tasty collection Drinking for me means only wine. . . . I believe in wine as I believe in Nature. I cherish its sacramental and legendary meanings, not to mention its power to intoxicate, and just as Nature can be both kind and…

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Feng Shui is an ancient Chinese approach to creating an environment that promotes prosperity, health, and happiness. The idea isn’t exclusively related to gardening, but to all aspects of life. In The Feng Shui Garden, Gill Hale and Sue Minter explain how you can apply the principles of Feng Shui to a garden, patio, balcony, or backyard in order to revitalize their space in a natural way.

The book offers color photos of actual Feng Shui gardens and clear instructions for the novice on the beginning basics principles of Chi, Yin and Yang, Lo Shu, and Bagua. You’ll learn how to choose an optimal garden site and shape; create balanced window boxes, roof gardens, and terraces; and place garden paths and statuary.

The Feng Shui Garden is an excellent alternative for beginner and advanced gardeners who are seeking methods and philosophies of gardening other than those traditionally Western.

Reviewed by Pat Regel.

Feng Shui is an ancient Chinese approach to creating an environment that promotes prosperity, health, and happiness. The idea isn't exclusively related to gardening, but to all aspects of life. In The Feng Shui Garden, Gill Hale and Sue Minter explain how you can apply…

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Readers who are unfamiliar with Gary Giddins’ earlier musical biographies or his commentaries on jazz for the Village Voice may recall him as one of the more animated talking heads in Ken Burns’ recent PBS documentary, Jazz. In this first of two projected volumes, the author brings his enthusiasm and painstaking scholarship to the task of resurrecting one of America’s most influential cultural figures. It is a noble mission. Besides being the consummate jazz and pop vocalist on stage, Bing Crosby also became a radio star, an Academy Award-winning actor and one of the world’s most successful recording artists. Giddins’ first chronicle covers Crosby from birth to 1940, by which time he had reached the top as a band singer, started a family, charted dozens of hit records and begun his series of “Road” movies with Bob Hope.

If there is a criticism to be made of this immensely informative book, it is that Giddins sometimes tells too much. It takes him 30 pages to get Crosby born (in 1903 in Tacoma, Washington) and another 80 or so to get him away from home and on his way to Los Angeles. In the interim, though, we learn a great deal about early 20th century show business and watch as Crosby evolves into the easygoing, self-assured figure he would remain in the national consciousness until his death in 1977. Unlike most of his peers in the business, Crosby was well-educated in addition to being naturally bright. He received a classical education at Gonzaga University and was on his way to a law degree there when the call to music became irresistible.

Although he was passionate about his music, Crosby appeared casual in his performance of it. He brought attention to lyrics by caressing, understating and playing with them. He was one of the first singers, Giddins points out, to master the microphone. Later generations would pigeonhole Crosby as a “crooner” or forget about him altogether. But Louis Armstrong proclaimed him “the Boss of All Singers,” and ultracool Artie Shaw tagged him as “the first hip white person born in the United States.” A well-written and entertaining work, Giddins biography will, with any luck, revive interest in Crosby the way Nick Tosches’ Dino: Living High in the Dirty Business of Dreams did with Crosby’s disciple, Dean Martin.

Edward Morris is a Nashville-based writer.

Readers who are unfamiliar with Gary Giddins' earlier musical biographies or his commentaries on jazz for the Village Voice may recall him as one of the more animated talking heads in Ken Burns' recent PBS documentary, Jazz. In this first of two projected volumes, the…

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YE OLDE CURIOSITY SHOPPE Expletives deleted Editor’s note: Each month we see lots of books. Some of the curious arrivals are featured in this space.

I don’t remember why I started swearing, James V. O’Connor writes. But start he did, as he demonstrates in Cuss Control: The Complete Book on How to Curb Your Cursing. His avowed goal is to get American language out of the gutter, but to do so he rakes through a truckload of smelly gutterspeak. The result is quite an eyebrow-raising lexicon. O’Connor’s mother may wash out his mouth with soap.

For example, he devotes a lot of space to a particular four-letter word, including exploring its likely etymology. For those who want to quit using the word (in any of the many ways he lists), O’Connor suggests alliterative replacements, including fool, fuss, futz, and fiddle. He also offers a rhyming alternative, a four-syllable word popular in rap songs.

Of course, I am dancing around the objectionable words themselves, because of BookPage’s well-known commitment to clean living and family values. O’Connor is less timid. In fact, his crusade may be hampered by aspiring cussers who buy Cuss Control for creative suggestions. Oh, the irony.

YE OLDE CURIOSITY SHOPPE Expletives deleted Editor's note: Each month we see lots of books. Some of the curious arrivals are featured in this space.

I don't remember why I started swearing, James V. O'Connor writes. But start he did, as he…

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The man who was Mission Control during the early days of NASA has written a fascinating autobiography called Flight, a book that takes us back to a time when space exploration was still a fledgling project. As one of the leaders of the army of pencil pushers that made the space program happen, Chris Kraft, the chief of flight operations for the moon launches who later became head of the Johnson Space Center in Houston, had a unique vantage point. Full of insight into the technical, political and familial aspects of putting a man into space, his book is a delight to read, a memoir that conjures up all the optimism and bravado of a younger America.

Flight begins in the Tidewater region of Virginia, where Christopher Columbus Kraft Jr. grew up a hard-working child of the Depression. He attended college at Virginia Tech, then took a job testing aircraft for the government, eventually joining a new organization called NASA. Kraft does a good job of conveying the intricacies, personalities, excitement and frustration that characterized a career with the organization. He is also surprisingly blunt, singling out some astronauts as incompetent, some as sycophants and some as cool and intelligent. He gives similar assessments of his coworkers; at this point in his life, he clearly has no reason to pull his punches.

Indeed, Kraft writes with honesty throughout Flight. He has little patience with bureaucracy, either governmental or scientific, and blames both for the delays that kept the United States from putting the first man into space, and for subsequent decisions that have kept us from returning to the moon for the past three decades. If Kraft had his way, America would have had a base on Mars years ago. Part of what makes his memoir a genuine and refreshing read is that Kraft doesn’t spare himself from criticism. The three Apollo astronauts that perished in an on-pad fire clearly trouble him to this day. Yet, despite such bitter losses, he takes obvious pride in what he and his comrades accomplished. Kraft also seems to savor the title bestowed on him "Flight." Sometimes a mark of respect is all that we desire, and Chris Kraft certainly deserves the respect of us all.

James Neal Webb would hitch a ride on the Space Shuttle in a heartbeat.

The man who was Mission Control during the early days of NASA has written a fascinating autobiography called Flight, a book that takes us back to a time when space exploration was still a fledgling project. As one of the leaders of the army of…

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