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Having integrated some of these philosophies into your parenting practice, you’re ready to entrust someone else with the task. Or are you? I’ve always likened child-raising to a wildlife catch-and-release program. You nurture, love and fiercely protect this little life, and then it’s time to send your beloved creature into the big, wide world. A terrifying prospect, made less so by Practical Wisdom for Parents: Demystifying the Preschool Years. Is my child ready for the transition? For that matter, am I? What can I do to prepare for it? These and other questions are addressed in the book by two highly qualified, respected authors. Nancy Schulman and Ellen Birnbaum are directors of one of the most prestigious preschools in the country, the 92nd Street Y Nursery School in New York. Together they have almost 60 years of experience with preschoolers and here offer sage advice about the 3 to 5 set. Any parent whose child has experienced separation anxiety or any parent who has herself walked around teary-eyed with that phantom-limb feeling after dropping her child at school will find comfort here. As anyone who’s tried to extricate a sobbing toddler from his leg knows, leaving a child at school can be a heart-wrenching experience for both of you. Whether discussing The Social Lives of Children or Developing Morals and Ethics, these authors are keen observers of kids and know what makes toddlers tick.

Having integrated some of these philosophies into your parenting practice, you're ready to entrust someone else with the task. Or are you? I've always likened child-raising to a wildlife catch-and-release program. You nurture, love and fiercely protect this little life, and then it's time…
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Once you’ve got the gear, it’s time to rear that beautiful baby of yours. Bright from the Start: The Simple, Science-Backed Way to Nurture Your Child’s Developing Mind from Birth to Age 3 offers practical ideas for parents on how to relate to these little people and help them thrive. Author Dr. Jill Stamm, co-founder of New Directions Institute for Infant Brain Development, with co-author Paula Spencer, teaches the ABCs of parenting: attention, bonding and communication. Of course, if parenting were as simple as A-B-C we wouldn’t need Dr. Stamm’s informative, thoroughly researched book. She translates cutting-edge neuroscience into practical advice for parents on how to engage with your baby in ways that promote growth and well-being. She offers helpful ideas for interactive play and ways of meeting a baby’s cognitive and emotional needs during these crucial years. Is this book essential to your parenting library? Stamm right, it is.

Once you've got the gear, it's time to rear that beautiful baby of yours. Bright from the Start: The Simple, Science-Backed Way to Nurture Your Child's Developing Mind from Birth to Age 3 offers practical ideas for parents on how to relate to these…
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Let’s start at the very beginning with Baby Must-Haves: The Essential Guide to Everything from Cribs to Bibs. Parenting magazine has long been the voice of reason for moms and dads alike. Now, hooray, they are offering the ultimate, comprehensive resource for all your baby needs. Do you really have to have that wipes warmer? (Answer: no, but it would be nice.) Can you forgo that bulky activity saucer, or neglecta-tron as we fondly used to call it? (Answer: an emphatic NO, you cannot.) The editors of Parenting have it all covered, in a nice, soft fleecy blanket way. They’ve gathered information from the ultimate authorities, Moms All Over the Country, who know whereof they speak. This guide is packed, like an overstuffed diaper bag, with product lists, mom tips and checklists. It’s nothing short of a godsend.

Let's start at the very beginning with Baby Must-Haves: The Essential Guide to Everything from Cribs to Bibs. Parenting magazine has long been the voice of reason for moms and dads alike. Now, hooray, they are offering the ultimate, comprehensive resource for all your…
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Girls’ Best Book of Knitting, Sewing, and Embroidery, by Virginie Desmoulins, aims to give girls an overview of three classic crafts that are still popular among women of all ages. The projects are small, ranging from embroidery sample cards to a knit bag to four sewn outfits (one for each season) for a cardboard doll that is punched out of the cover, perfect for an afternoon (or many afternoons) of crafty fun. Given the doll, readers might assume that Desmoulins is aiming at the relatively young, but the vocabulary sometimes seems a little advanced for grade-schoolers, and some of the instructions will likely send girls running to their favorite crafty adult for advice. Girls with some crafting experience, however, will find the instructions and illustrations enough to guide them through the easy projects. And a mother, grandmother or aunt who wants to teach a young girl how to knit, sew or embroider, will find Girls’ Best Book a helpful resource.

Girls' Best Book of Knitting, Sewing, and Embroidery, by Virginie Desmoulins, aims to give girls an overview of three classic crafts that are still popular among women of all ages. The projects are small, ranging from embroidery sample cards to a knit bag to…
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For people whose crafty skills are limited to getting airline upgrades, Travel Scrapbooks: Creating Albums of Your Trips and Adventures might inspire vagabonds to keep their travel photos and mementos somewhere nicer than that old shoebox in the back of the closet or the memory card in their digital camera. This book features real scrapbooks from crafters across the country, showcasing their travel photos, journaling and design skills in albums about trips to the zoo, Niagara Falls, the great cities of Europe, Sea World, a local carnival and many more adventures. The scrapbooks are all shapes, sizes and formats including round books and a book in a vintage-looking suitcase and use tons of different techniques, tools and scrapbooking supplies (resources are helpfully listed in the back so readers can recreate a technique). Tips on such topics as travel photography and using souvenirs in projects are included. Some of the pages featured here may be a little intimidating to new scrapbookers, but crafters of all levels will surely be inspired.

For people whose crafty skills are limited to getting airline upgrades, Travel Scrapbooks: Creating Albums of Your Trips and Adventures might inspire vagabonds to keep their travel photos and mementos somewhere nicer than that old shoebox in the back of the closet or the…
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If you’ve traveled to London, you may have visited V.V. Rouleaux, the world-renowned ribbons and trimming company. Annabel Lewis, the company’s founder and owner, has so many ideas about what to do with her products it will make an inept home decorator’s head spin. Her Ribbons and Trims: 100 Ideas to Personalize Your Home includes more than 100 ideas for using ribbons, beads, feathers, bows, yarn, rope, chandelier crystals and other adornments to recover, repurpose and remake everything from furniture to curtains to lampshades (the feathered lampshade has a certain garish Victorian appeal).

Step-by-step instructions illustrate some project ideas, while others are described or pictured merely as a technique that the home designer could use as a guide. Multitudes of gorgeous photographs give the book a you can do it feel, even for people who don’t have perfectly put-together homes. The projects can get a little intimidating at times, as when whole rooms decorated with ribbons and trims are shown (a plaid wall created with ribbons rather than paint, for example), but it also offers great tips and tricks that anyone can use to jazz up a footstool or a pillow, or even their whole house.

If you've traveled to London, you may have visited V.V. Rouleaux, the world-renowned ribbons and trimming company. Annabel Lewis, the company's founder and owner, has so many ideas about what to do with her products it will make an inept home decorator's head spin.…
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Three years after his resignation, Nixon negotiated a large fee to do a series of interviews with British TV personality David Frost. In preparing for the encounter, Frost hired a team of researchers to supply him questions and background facts. One of that team was James Reston Jr. He chronicles the event in The Conviction of Richard Nixon. The conviction, of course, arose from Nixon’s confessions about his complicity in Watergate. (These interviews are the source for the current Broadway play, Frost/Nixon, and also for a movie that’s due out next year.) By 1977, though, the world was basically beating a dead horse. Not being in power, Nixon no longer posed a danger to the republic. But Reston asserts in his foreword that there are frightening parallels between what Nixon and his minions did to undermine the Constitution and international law and what’s happening in the current administration. Nixon’s dark legacy, he concludes, lives on.

Three years after his resignation, Nixon negotiated a large fee to do a series of interviews with British TV personality David Frost. In preparing for the encounter, Frost hired a team of researchers to supply him questions and background facts. One of that team…
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<b>Two of the president’s men</b> Serious though his subject is, Jules Witcover’s account in <b>Very Strange Bedfellows</b> of Nixon’s relationship with Spiro Agnew, his first vice president, is riotously funny and revealing. As governor of Maryland, Agnew initially supported Rockefeller to be the Republican standard bearer in the 1968 election. When Rockefeller demurred, Agnew switched his enthusiasm to Nixon, who then, as a last resort, tapped Agnew for vice president. Since Nixon had felt neglected as Dwight Eisenhower’s vice president, he was determined to assign Agnew serious political responsibilities and treat him with respect. However, since he had no affection for the man, he went out of his way to avoid personal contact with him, even after Agnew became a conservative star via his colorful denunciations of the media (always a Nixon whipping boy) and war protesters. To complicate matters, Nixon developed something like an adolescent crush on former Texas governor John Connally and decided he would make a better vice president if somehow Agnew could be shunted aside.

One ploy Nixon considered as a way of dislodging Agnew from office was to appoint him to the Supreme Court. This notion arose after the Senate had rejected two of the president’s nominees. Whether Nixon ever broached the subject directly with Agnew is unclear, but he did discuss it at length with his closest advisors before finally moving on to other schemes. It is obvious from the transcripts Witcover cites of those discussions that Nixon cared little about Agnew’s legal qualifications which were minimal or about his political philosophy and the impact it could have on the court. He just wanted him out. Thus, much of the talk centered on how the Senate and the press might react. Not well, they soon decided.

The conversations Nixon had with his chief of staff, H.R. (Bob) Haldeman, about what to do with Agnew are more comic to read than a script for Saturday Night Live. Discussing an international junket on which Agnew mostly played golf an activity that left little for his press entourage to report on Haldeman said to Nixon, Hell, on the way to the golf course, he could stop at an orphanage and pat a couple of kids on the head and the press gets a picture and a little quote about how he says it’s too bad these kids are orphans, and he could go on and play golf . . . [I]t’s so easy. Circumstances eventually solved Nixon’s vice presidential problem. After being charged with taking kickbacks, Agnew reluctantly resigned. Ten months later, Nixon was out, too.

<b>Two of the president's men</b> Serious though his subject is, Jules Witcover's account in <b>Very Strange Bedfellows</b> of Nixon's relationship with Spiro Agnew, his first vice president, is riotously funny and revealing. As governor of Maryland, Agnew initially supported Rockefeller to be the Republican standard…

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<b>Two of the president’s men</b> Like Nixon, Henry Kissinger who began as the president’s national security adviser and then moved on to become his secretary of state achieved political power by a combination of raw intelligence, towering ambition and unremitting guile. And, just as with Nixon, it was never quite clear when Kissinger was animated by political conviction and when by quirks of personality. It is no wonder, then, that these two titanic egos would be drawn to each other, even as each railed against the other’s perceived deficiencies. This condition of mutual dependence and its effect on national policy is what Robert Dallek examines in <b>Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power</b>.

Dallek sets the stage by noting that Kissinger acted as a double agent in the months leading up to the 1968 election that brought Nixon to power. Then identified politically with his patron, Nelson Rockefeller, Kissinger tapped into his Democratic sources to feed information to the Nixon camp. At the same time, he kept his distance from Nixon in case Hubert Humphrey won the election and had a proper place for him. While Kissinger was never particularly skilled or careful in concealing his duplicity, Nixon nonetheless chose him as his diplomatic right hand and de facto confessor. Dallek traces the dynamics of this odd duo through such sticky issues as the failing war in Vietnam (in spite of vows to end the war, Nixon committed more than 20,000 additional troops to the doomed cause and spread the conflict into Cambodia and Laos), the CIA overthrow of Salvador Allende in Chile, continuing troubles in the Middle East, the arms race with Russia, the opening of China and, finally, the debacle of Watergate.

<b>Two of the president's men</b> Like Nixon, Henry Kissinger who began as the president's national security adviser and then moved on to become his secretary of state achieved political power by a combination of raw intelligence, towering ambition and unremitting guile. And, just as with…

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Americans may soon know more about Richard Nixon’s personality and escapades than they do about Paris Hilton’s. At least, Americans who read will. Books on the disgraced but unsinkable 37th president just keep on coming. Recently, Margaret MacMillan examined Nixon’s most fruitful political achievement in Nixon and Mao: The Week That Changed the World. Nixon also figures prominently, albeit without star billing, in Jim Newton’s Justice for All: Earl Warren and the Nation He Made. The four new books here continue the presidential probing, buttressed by a wealth of White House tapes, insider diaries and eyewitness accounts.

Elizabeth Drew’s Richard M. Nixon, part of Times Books’ American Presidents series, offers the widest view of his administration. Drew covered Nixon for the New Yorker while he was still in office and thus brings a reporter’s summarizing directness to her account. Although she acknowledges Nixon’s intelligence, doggedness and occasional successes, she ultimately concludes that his personality made him unfit to lead the country.

Americans may soon know more about Richard Nixon's personality and escapades than they do about Paris Hilton's. At least, Americans who read will. Books on the disgraced but unsinkable 37th president just keep on coming. Recently, Margaret MacMillan examined Nixon's most fruitful political achievement…
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Since his childhood in the 1960s, author Richard Corfield has been fascinated with rocket travel and the vastness of outer space. Now a planetologist, Corfield offers his latest book, Lives of the Planets: A Natural History of the Solar System. In this accessible yet still very challenging overview of the current state of humankind’s knowledge of the sun, the planets, asteroids and other heavenly bodies, Corfield deftly interpolates the important formative observations of the great early sky-watchers and physical theorists (Newton, Galileo, Copernicus, Kepler, Laplace, etc.). Yet the bulk of his text concerns the vast amounts of information gathered in the past 30 years by such unmanned deep-space probes as those in the Pioneer, Voyager and Galileo series.

Indeed, the spirit of such imaginative stargazers as the late Carl Sagan infuses this volume, with its enthusiastic technical descriptions of the sun and the nearer planets but more so of the further planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune and its tantalizing consideration of the possibilities for carbon-based life that might one day be found amid the swirling mix of gaseous elements that make up much of what we know of our star system. (Titan, a moon of Saturn, emerges as a strong candidate for Sagan-like contact.) Corfield brings us up-to-date on the recent debate over Pluto’s planetary status, offering an explanation of its 2006 redefinition as a dwarf planet by the International Astronomical Union, its size (Pluto is smaller than our moon) and its maverick orbit being key deciding factors. Corfield also cues us in to the fact that Neptune, like Saturn, has rings (who knew?), and that the scientific community, now looking past poor Pluto, has focused its far-reaching gaze on such trans-Neptunian bodies as Eris and its moon, Dysnomia. Along the way, the author discusses in detail the competitive efforts between the two key California exploratory agencies, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the Ames Research Center, which, in addition to the European Space Agency, have been primarily responsible for collecting much of the ongoing research data and photographic evidence. This thoughtfully conceived contemporary primer is a must-read for general readers with an interest in astronomy.

Martin Brady writes from Nashville.

Since his childhood in the 1960s, author Richard Corfield has been fascinated with rocket travel and the vastness of outer space. Now a planetologist, Corfield offers his latest book, Lives of the Planets: A Natural History of the Solar System. In this accessible yet…
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An innocent error in judgment by geographers in 1507 at St. Die, then a sovereign duchy located between France and Germany, led to the naming of the Western hemisphere’s continents after the Florentine explorer Amerigo Vespucci (1451-1512). We know more about Vespucci than any of the other explorers of his time, except Christopher Columbus. The problem is that little of Vespucci’s writings survives, and sorting out the truth about him has confounded scholars for years. In a fascinating exploration of Vespucci and his times, Amerigo: The Man Who Gave His Name to America, noted historian Felipe Fernandez-Armesto now believes he has overcome enough serious questions to give readers a coherent, but, of necessity, at times speculative, biography.

Although Vespucci sailed for Spain and Portugal, there is documentation of only one fleet for which he was to be captain and that ship never sailed. Fernandez-Armesto describes him as a master of relentless self-invention, from which sprang a dazzling succession of career moves. From early on in Florence he was engaged in all kinds of business dealings, primarily as a commission agent buying and selling gems for others. He became a fixer with a talent for wheeling and dealing for a wide circle of clients, including the Medici family. Vespucci moved to Seville and became a long-range, large-scale merchant, working with Gianotto Berardi, a prominent slave dealer who financed Columbus’ voyages across the Atlantic Ocean. Upon Berardi’s death, Vespucci, as his agent, was responsible for the debts incurred by these failed voyages. Then, when others were allowed to make the transatlantic voyage for Spain, Vespucci, with no known maritime experience or qualifications, made the trip, probably because of his expertise about pearls, which Columbus had discovered. After this voyage, Vespucci presented himself as a nautical authority and next turns up in Portugal, where the king asked him to sail on a voyage whose purpose is still unclear.

Vespucci was well-read, and Fernandez-Armesto says that when he related his experiences, he filtered them through his reading. He meticulously elucidates how the genres of romance, travel, and hagiography were so interpenetrated that it was hard to tell fancy from fact and says that to separate one from the other in Vespucci’s writings is a work of critical literary exploration. Nevertheless, he is able to establish a checklist of characteristics of Vespucci’s writing style that help him to measure authenticity.

Amerigo offers many historical riches, among them that those early scholars only meant to attach Vespucci’s name to the southern part of the hemisphere, where tradition placed the Antipodes and where Vespucci thought he had found them. The book also includes an ongoing discussion of the ties between Columbus and Vespucci and the claims by the partisans of each man that their hero has been fairly or unfairly treated.

Fernandez-Armesto considers Vespucci of particular importance as a representative of a strange, world-shaping breed . . . Mediterranean men who took to the Atlantic. He finds it hard to believe that without the initiative of Mediterranean participants, the Atlantic we now inhabit the home sea of Western civilization, across which we traffic in goods and ideas and around which we still tend to huddle for defense ever would have come to be. As we acknowledge the 500th anniversary of the naming of America, it is good to have this fine book to tell us how it came about.

Roger Bishop is a retired Nashville bookseller and a frequent contributor to BookPage.

An innocent error in judgment by geographers in 1507 at St. Die, then a sovereign duchy located between France and Germany, led to the naming of the Western hemisphere's continents after the Florentine explorer Amerigo Vespucci (1451-1512). We know more about Vespucci than any…
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It would be hard to find an American girl who hasn’t read a book by Judy Blume. More than 75 million copies of her books have been sold, and her work has been translated into more than 20 languages. The enduring popularity of books like Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing, Blubber and Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret is due in part to her ability to deal with real issues and feelings in the lives of children and teens, including racial prejudice, menstruation, divorce and masturbation.

According to the American Library Association, five of Blume’s books are on the list of the 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books. But that hasn’t stopped generations of kids from embracing them, something that’s immediately apparent in this new book of personal essays by 24 notable women writers, Everything I Needed to Know About Being a Girl I Learned from Judy Blume. Edited by Jennifer O’Connell, the book includes contributions from well-known authors for children, teens and adults, including Meg Cabot, Megan McCafferty, Cara Lockwood, Melissa Senate and Julie Kenner.

From recalling teen angst over breast size, to the realization that one’s parents like Karen’s in It’s Not the End of the World are headed for divorce, to taking comfort from a Blume character during a life-threatening illness, the writers in this volume share a myriad of funny, bittersweet and heartfelt Judy Blume moments. Teens and adult fans of Blume will love this tribute to this unique American author and might even be inspired to write their own memories of how Judy Blume’s magic helped them navigate the often rocky road to adulthood.

It would be hard to find an American girl who hasn't read a book by Judy Blume. More than 75 million copies of her books have been sold, and her work has been translated into more than 20 languages. The enduring popularity of books…

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