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April 5, 2008

Inventors and Inventions

The past hundred and fifty years have seen progress of a nature and magnitude that is hard to conceptualize. I try and put it in human terms to our kids. My mother was born in the early 1930's. When she was young, her grandmother lived with them and she had been born in the late 1850's. The chain of living connection that I put to our kids is that they know their grandmother who can tell them the stories she heard from her grandmother so that they effectively have a living family memory going back to the 1850's.

The question I put to them is: What do they know and experience that their great-great-grandmother would not have? Sometimes I twist it and ask what she would have known and experienced that they have not. To the first question these are some of the obvious and material answers: electricity, cars, jets, telephones, cell phones, elevators, skyscrapers, computers, the internet, refrigerators, television, movies, etc. Then they usually get on to some of the less obvious and even somewhat esoteric answers that are just as pertinent: food out-of-season, surfaced roads, heavy freight trains, heavy-lift cranes, x-ray machines, electric or gas ovens, ice on demand, universal voting rights, toothpaste and toothbrushes for everyone, stores everywhere with everything you might need at all hours, friends that you talk to all the time but never see, etc. If they are really energized with this game they then move onto some really quite interesting discussions; absence of hunger, long life, good health, universal education, instant information about weather/politics/the economy and so on.

In trying to make these changes real and pertinent, I give the example from Reginald Hegarty's biographical The Rope's End in which he is signed on as a crewman to a whaling ship when he was only ten or twelve. A couple of years into their cruise, his service comes to a close when they speak another sailing ship and discover that, unbeknownst to them, the US and Germany have been at war with one another for four months. Such isolation is virtually inconceivable today.

The consequence of this cumulative wave of inventions and development is hard to describe. People live twice as long as they did one hundred and fifty years ago. Not only do they live longer; they enjoy far better health. Infant mortality is a tiny fraction of what it was. Death in childbirth is vanishingly rare instead of commonplace. Remarriages are as commonplace as before but because of the choice of divorce rather than widowhood. Incomes are many, many times what they were a century and half ago. Our poorest citizens enjoy a material wealth beyond that of all but a tiny few from that distant historical age.

This is all a round about way of getting at a core proposition. While there are all sorts of cultural, economic and politic forces in play that affect how countries develop, the core engine driving these changes is individuals and groups of people - engineers, entrepreneurs, scientists, inventors - taking ideas and turning them into reality. Our collective debt to these men and women is enormous. But where are they in our children's books?

It is an interesting absence that really only struck me in preparing this essay. When I recollect my reading from childhood I began to realize that perhaps the absence is not in the storytelling but in the particular medium. In other words, when I try and think of particular books that had an inventor as the central character, I could only really come up with the Professor Brainstawm series out of the UK and a couple of childhood mystery series stories such as one in the Hardy Boys where the plot revolved around an inventor. All the other examples I came up with, I realized, were short stories in anthologies. Hummph. Don't know what to make of that but there it is.

So maybe nothing is different today. I don't read many children's stories anthologies these days, so maybe the stories of inventors are still out there and I am just not seeing them. I certainly hope so, because these are heroes in as every important way as the traditional military, political and historic heroes.

In terms of central characters or plots in fiction that evolve around the act of inventing things, I only came up with Professor Brainstawm (out of print), Rube Goldberg, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Violet Beauregard in the Lemony Snickett series. Ouch! Some of the Homer Price stories kind of skirt the small town inventor such as the one about the automatic donut fryer.

The Wright Brothers, Thomas Edison and Henry Ford get a look-in from a picture book, independent reader and young adult level of reading but after that the pickings are pretty slim. Benjamin Franklin's activities as both a scientist and inventor also usually draw reasonable attention. In particular, the Childhoods of Famous Americans series does a pretty decent job at the Independent Reader level of exposing kids to the lives of inventors in a way that is entertaining and informative.

There are plenty of books that are essentially reference books on particular inventions or inventors. There are a disproportionate number of books serving a gender or race balancing function - inventions by women, inventions by African-Americans, etc. and they are good so far as they go, though suffering, as most these books do, of a surfeit of message and a diminution of exciting writing and passionate story-telling.

The issue would appear to me to be not that inventors of one race or gender or religion or some such are not receiving enough attention but that there is just too high a level of inattention at all. We need more books that feed the desire to build, to create, to invent, to make that which did not exist before.

The bright lining in this general cloud is that, somewhat uncommonly for the general trend, the number of really good books actually increases as you move up to the Young Adult reading level. In fact, there are a lot of good stories at Young Adult. We just need to feed their imagination and excitement earlier.

The booklist created below is dominated of necessity by biographies and by reference type books. I put out the request to TTMD community members, let's identify those stories that revolve around inventors and inventions that hook children early on the idea of creating their own future which will be as exciting and different as the progress of the past one hundred and fifty years has been.

Picture Books

Young Thomas Edison by Michael Dooling and illustrated by Michael Dooling Recommended
The Wright Brothers by Russell Freedman Recommended
Accidents May Happen by Charlotte Foltz Jones and illustrated by John O'Brien Suggested
My Brothers' Flying Machine by Jane Yolen and illustrated by Jim Burke Recommended

Independent Readers

Thomas A. Edison by Sue Guthridge Recommended
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl and illustrated by Quentin Blake Highly Recommended
They All Laughed by Ira Flatow Suggested
To Fly by Wendie C. Old and illustrated by Robert Andrew Parker Suggested
Eureka! Great Inventions and How They Happened by Richard Platt Suggested
Girls Think of Everything by Catherine Thimmesh and illustrated by Melissa Sweet Suggested
Great Inventions: Geniuses and Gizmos: Innovation in Our Time by Time Magazine Recommended
Rube Goldberg by Maynard Frank Wolfe and Rube Goldberg Suggested

Young Adults

Inventing Modern America by David E. Brown Recommended
A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson Recommended
The Scientists by John R. Gribbin Recommended
Rocket Boys - by Homer H. Hickam Highly Recommended
Invention by Design by Henry Petroski Suggested
The Evolution of Useful Things by Henry Petroski Recommended
To Engineer Is Human by Henry Petroski Recommended
Great Inventions: Geniuses and Gizmos: Innovation in Our Time by Time Magazine Suggested

April 13, 2008

Concept Books

They are not quite a blank slate, but babies do require an awful lot of topping up with really basic concepts, information, knowledge and wisdom. While the overwhelming majority of the distillation of concepts, information and knowledge is through the spoken word between parent and child, between siblings, and between child and friends, there is a small role for the concept book.

As parents, particularly first-time parents, I think it is easy to take for granted what we already know and overlook the simple basics that our young children have yet to comprehend. Our acquisition of these basic concepts occurs at such a young age that it is already beyond the horizon of recollection for most of us when our own children come along.

Take, as an example, the ability to know that just because you don't see something, doesn't mean that it is not there. I remember first encountering this in a real way with my niece, one or two years old at the time. We spent what seemed like the better part of an afternoon, with my hiding behind a sofa and every couple of minutes popping my head over the back of the sofa to her shriek of delight at this genuinely unexpected sudden appearance. While I did not think of it as so at the time - it was just a mindlessly entertaining way of entertaining her and there is nothing quite so pleasing as a child's genuine squeal of delight - I was teaching her the basic concept that things have an independent existence whether you see them or not. Psychologists have a learned term for this but it escapes me. Later in life many things are predicated on this basic concept and yet it is one that has to be learned.

The surprise we feel when we come across the blank spaces, (those concepts we assume everyone inherently knows but do not), is akin to that which we feel as an adult when we come across a peer that cannot swim or cannot ride a bike. We learned so long ago that we don't really recollect that it was a skill that did have to be acquired and we are astounded to find others without that skill which we take for granted.

Take the simple concept of numbers and counting. If you are interested in anthropology, the record is replete with instances of isolated tribes having virtually no concept of counting at all. Depending on the tribe, sometimes the numbering system is as basic as one and many. It seems inconceivable to us in a modern economy and society to be able to work with a numerical world consisting of only "one or many" but it works for them.

Many years ago I recall reading an essay by an anthropologist/linguist who was speculating about how the very nature of a language might shape and influence the development of a people. The particular example he was using was that of the ancient Greek language versus many of the old Germanic languages. He pointed out that, relative to many other languages, ancient Greek was filled with words for encompassing categories or concepts. While the old Germanic languages had words for red, blue, green, yellow, etc. they did not have a word for the concept "color". He posited that the Greek language, rich in conceptual terms, allowed them to think in a more abstract way than had previously been feasible. I tucked it away with a pinch of skepticism and have never seen any similar argument made since then, but it is an intriguing thought to pull out and mull every now and then.

Another phenomenon of which I have read a number of times but never seen a study on is that of the capacity to view two-dimensional images. Most of the instances of which I have come across have involved animal collectors or hunters visiting some remote village or community, trying to ascertain whether a particular species of animal is known to exist in the area. The collector pulls out a photograph of the animal and the people are unable to identify it, though it later turns out from the verbal discussion that the animal is well-known in the area. The issue being that your eye takes some training to interpret two-dimensional information (such as that represented by a photograph) and if you have never been exposed to that kind of image, your brain simply cannot process it in a comprehensible way.

Even in advanced economies, all countries deal with some marginal level of either functional or profound illiteracy. I recall a consulting project we were undertaking years ago here in the US with a municipal water authority. They were trying to figure out how to get more work done with their existing work force and we were tasked with helping that process. One of the first steps was to simply understand what actually occurred in the field on a day to day basis (rather than what the executives thought happened). To gather this information, we devised an information collection device by which first line field supervisors could collect an accurate picture of who did what in the field in order to get work done. The whole project took a detour at that point. Our industrial engineer who had designed the data collection process, which involved filling in some forms, sat down with the supervisors to go over with them how they were to collect the information and only then discovered that forty percent of the field supervisors were functionally illiterate. They were not stupid people but they had never learned to read and had developed some astonishingly sophisticated coping techniques so that it would never be apparent to anyone else that they could not read.

Children are the most reliable means of taking you back to the beginning of things when it is all as close to a blank slate as conceivable. When the whole world is magical and unpredictable. The concept of seasons doesn't exist because you can't anticipate the future - there is only the now. There is an awesome wonder when the whole world is fresh and unpredictable, but there is a frustration as well and children can make you well aware of that frustration. If everything is unpredictable, then you have no power - it is magical but there is that dark side of the magic as well. You are at the whim of an environment you don't understand and does not answer to your will.

When we help our children build basic concepts of time and numbers and letters, we are taking a little bit of the magic out of their world but we are also giving them the first tools that give them some power and control. The rest of our lives are in a way a postscript to this first learning - how to maintain an invigorating sense of magic while having the power of understanding.

Concept books are a highly focused and specialized part of the children's book market and are pretty ephemeral in the reading life of a child. You don't use them for more than a few months or a year. Though they may have strong preferences, children rarely bond with a concept book because it is not a story book: there is rarely a strong story line and no one with whom to bond. Concept books do, however, serve a purpose and can be a fun and beautiful addition to an early library.

The concept book intends to impart an extremely basic set of information to a child, information so foundational that all other knowledge acquisition is dependent on it. The classical concept books are alphabet books (learning the alphabet as the first step towards being able to read) and counting books (understanding the concept of quantities and counting). Over the years the boundaries of what might be considered a concept book have been expanded to include books dealing with color, shapes, sizes, opposites, directions (up versus down, in versus out), senses, textures, sounds, emotions, telling time, measurements, money, etc.

When you look over the booklists of concept books you suddenly realize just how much there is to choose from. How to choose? A useful and basic rule of thumb, which we will shortly also recommend breaking, is to keep it simple. Concept books that we found useful with our children included many varieties of ABC books and counting books, and then a scattering of shapes, opposites, and sounds type of books. "Concept" books dealing with more sophisticated concepts such as measurement, distances, time, months, seasons, and such may be selectively of value but they teeter at the edge where the child is too advanced for the simplistic presentation of a complex notion. It sometimes works and often it does not. Frequently these ideas are better presented in simple storylines in an easily understandable way.

Some concept books try and combine multiple concepts such as distinguishing red (color) squares (shapes) from red circles. Sometimes it works but it is usually better to focus on a single concept at a time when teaching abstract ideas to young children.

One of the reasons for the plethora of concept books is that they are relatively straightforward to produce and market. Have a favorite illustrator or favorite author? They have probably done an alphabet book and/or counting book. Is your child fascinated by a particular topic (dinosaurs, animals, machines, flowers, construction sites, racecars, foods, etc.), then there is almost certainly an alphabet or counting book cast around that topic. Any hook that catches the child's interest is worth using.

Having said that it is best to keep concept books simple, the one caveat that I would make to that statement is that combining concept books with poetry and rhyme seems to be particularly attractive to most children. There can be a playfulness and vivaciousness to the spoken words that they enjoy as they digest these new ideas. The grandfather (though not the first) of all alphabet books is Edward Lear's An Alphabet. There is something about his wildly random and nonsensical but rhythmic and repetitive rhymes that seems to engage every child that encounters them.

A
Apple%20Pie.gif

a

A was once an apple-pie,
Pidy, Widy, Tidy, Pidy, Nice insidy, Apple-pie!


And don't forget Xerxes, one of Sally's personal childhood favorites.

X
Xerxes.gif

x

X was once a great king Xerxes,
Xerxy, Perxy, Turxy, Xerxy, Linxy, lurxy, Great King Xerxes!


Below is a selection of concept books which our children have enjoyed along with others recommended by community members and other sources. Let us know of any favorites you have.

Concept Books

Anno's Counting Book by Mitsumasa Anno Recommended
A Gardener's Alphabet by Mary Azarian Recommended
Ten, Nine, Eight by Molly Bang Suggested
The Grouchy Ladybug by Eric Carle Suggested
The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle Recommended
Matthew A.B.C. by Peter Catalanotto Suggested
Opposites by Robert Crowther Suggested
One Big Building by Michael Dahl and illustrated by Todd Ouren Suggested
Dr. Seuss' A B C by Dr. Seuss Recommended
Color Farm by Lois Ehlert Suggested
Color Zoo by Lois Ehlert Recommended
Eating the Alphabet by Lois Ehlert Recommended
Ape in a Cape by Fritz Eichenberg Suggested
The Wing on a Flea by Ed Emberley Suggested
The Letters Are Lost! by Lisa Campbell Ernst Suggested
Alphabet Under Construction by Denise Fleming Suggested
Where Is the Green Sheep by Mem Fox and illustrated by Judy Horacek Suggested
The Abc Bunny by Wanda Gag and illustrated by Howard Gag Recommended
Exactly the Opposite by Tana Hoban Suggested
Of Colors and Things by Tana Hoban Suggested
Shapes, Shapes, Shapes by Tana Hoban Suggested
Alphabet City by Stephen Johnson Suggested
Alison's Zinnia by Anita Lobel Suggested
On Market Street by Arnold Lobel Recommendation
Chicka Chicka Boom Boom by Bill Martin and John Archambault and illustratedby Lois Ehlert Suggested
Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? by Bill Martin and illustrated by Eric Carle Recommended
I Spy Shapes in Art by Lucy Micklethwait Recommended
Alligators All Around by Maurice Sendak Highly Recommended
One Was Johnny by Maurice Sendak Highly Recommended
Chicken Soup With Rice by Maurice Sendak Highly Recommended

April 18, 2008

Friendships Across Boundaries

Among the many joys of raising young children is to see how without boundaries they are at first. They know not where to fear to tread and so they tread everywhere. They tell unpleasant truths and undermine all the euphemisms we use everyday to speak guardedly. It is we as adults who begin to quickly map out boundaries for them, most often for their own protection. Sometimes it is as simple as "Don't get in the dog's face," "Don't put that in your mouth," sometimes it is a much more subtle "That's not what we do."

Boundaries per se are not wrong. Our lives are always defined, ying & yang-like by the existence of the "Other;" that which is not us. And we can get particularly refined in defining the Other; in fact, we are superb hair-splitters:

Agnostic vs. Religious
Other Religions vs. Christianity
Catholic vs. Protestant
Baptist vs. Episcopalian
High vs Low Church

Ad infinitum

Where do we get this habit of pigeon-holing, of laying out boundaries? Well, in part, it is hardwired into us. Part of our success as a species is that we have evolved to identify patterns - patterns in sound (speech and music), patterns in our environment (weather and seasons), patterns of danger, patterns everywhere.

Children start identifying patterns from the youngest age and it is what gives them the capacity to startle us. The patterns they think they see do not match the patterns we as adults are accustomed to seeing.

I recall being very startled by one of our kid's questions. I don't remember the exact circumstances, but they were perhaps three or four and I think we had spent the day with a group of friends in Australia. Most the people were Australian but there were a couple of Asian families as well. On the way home afterwards, one of our kids asked me, "Daddy, are we Asian?" Well, since we are Caucasian, this came as something of a surprise. I explained the difference between the appearances of Caucasians and Asians. At first I thought this was just a confusion owed to the similarity of the words. Talking it through though, it became apparent that that was not the issue at all.

Our child had noticed subtle dynamics in the conversation. The pattern that they had observed was that the Asians and the Americans were the ones different to this group of Australians. If we and the Asians were the different ones, then did this make us Asian? All perfectly logical once you think it through from a child's perspective, but yet another example of how different and fresh their perspective can be. And how differently they can interpret what and where the patterns and boundaries are.

All this effort to identify patterns and the categories that go with them are predicated on taking control of your environment. The more you are able to identify patterns and categories that are meaningful, the more you can begin to predict. Dark clouds - probably rain. Slithering animal - probably snake. Shouting and waving of arms - probably angry. Each prediction then becomes the basis for some action to encourage a good outcome or avoid a bad one.

One of the most pernicious trends of the past fifty years has been the sanctioned pigeon-holing of people based on one-dimensional attributes, usually race, ethnicity, gender or religion, each meaningless without context. The boundaries around which we build our assumptions only take on meaning when weighted against one another and in context. It is easy to create scenarios that highlight just how dramatic the differences in context can be. You are walking down the street late at night in a rough part of town and four or five young fellows emerge from an alley and walk towards you. With nothing more than that, you are probably quickly kicking into fight or flight mode. Change one thing and you are in an entirely different situation. Instead of emerging from a dark alley they are emerging from a church with a Youth Meeting Tonight sign at the front.

It is unavoidable that we teach our children boundaries and differences; and we often do it by accident.

Child: Daddy, I don't like him.
Parent: Why not?
Child: He smells and his clothes are all dirty.
Parent: Why do you think that is? Maybe they can't afford a washer and dryer and his clothes don't get cleaned that often.
With the best of intentions of getting your child to understand the context and to see that some things might be beyond a persons' direct control, you are also accidentally setting up the expectation that poor people are smelly people. Acchh! Parenting is the most complex task ever undertaken.

So what can be done about boundaries and stereotypes and categories. I don't think the answer is in trying to hide that there are differences between peoples but rather to give a context and show that some of those differences are important and some are not and that it is the differences that makes things interesting. To teach them that whatever the stereotypes might be, you need to approach a person as a person and not some statistical sampling - to give them the respect they deserve and to let them show you they are worthy of friendship rather than shutting that door through assumptions that may be accurate on average and can never be fully accurate for a data set of one.

There are thousands of truly wonderful children's stories that tell the tale of children and people coming together, many times unexpectedly, to overcome mutual suspicions arising from assumptions (or raw ignorance) about gender, race, age, ethnicity, religion, wealth, class, culture, accent, language, country of origin, etc. The following are some stories where friendships are forged across the boundaries of age, race, religion, class, etc.

Picture Books

A Splendid Friend Indeed by Suzanne Bloom Suggested
Sneetches and Other Stories by Dr. Seuss Highly Recommended
Pocahontas by Leslie Gourse and illustrated by Meryl Henderson Suggested
When Jessie Came Across the Sea by Amy Hest and illustrated by P. J. Lynch Highly Recommended
Great Wolf And the Good Woodsman by Helen Hoover and illustrated by Betsy Bowen Highly Recommended
Rikki-Tikki-Tavi by Rudyard Kipling and illustrated by Lambert Davis Highly Recommended
Frog and Toad Are Friends by Arnold Lobel Recommended
Secret of the Peaceful Warrior by Dan Millman and illustrated by Bruce T. Taylor Recommended
The Gardener by Sarah Stewart and illustrated by David Small Highly Recommended

Independent Readers

Eight Cousins or the Aunt-Hill by Louisa May Alcott Recommended
Indian in the Cupboard by Lynne Reid Banks and Brock Cole Highyl Recommended
Keeper Of Soles by Teresa Bateman and illustrated by Yayo Suggested
Hope Was Here by Joan Bauer Highly Recommended
A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett and illustrated by Tasha Tudor Highly Recommended
Granny Torrelli Makes Soup by Sharon Creech and illustrated by Christopher Raschka Suggested
Despereaux/the Tale Of Despereaux by Kate DiCamillo Recommended
Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo Highlt Recommended
Chicken Boy by Frances O'Roark Dowell Suggested
The Hundred Dresses by Eleanor Estes and illustrated by Louis Slobodkin Recommended
Once upon a Marigold by Jean Ferris Recommended
The Double Life of Pocahontas by Jean Fritz and illustrated by Ed Young Suggested
Lily's Crossing by Patricia Reilly Giff Recommended
Dark Water Rising by Marian Hale Suggested
Jessica by Kevin Henkes Suggested
Hoot by Carl Hiaasen Recommended
Journey to the River Sea by Eva Ibbotson and illustrated by Kevin Hawkes Highly Recommended
Martin Bridge Ready For Takeoff! by Jessica Scott Kerrin and illustrated by Joseph Kelly Suggested
The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling and illustrated by Jerry Pinkney Highly Recommended
Rikki-Tikki-Tavi by Rudyard Kipling and illustrated by Lambert Davis Recommended
Last Days of Summer by Steve Kluger Suggested
Buddha Boy by Kathe Koja Suggested
The View from Saturday by E. L. Konigsburg Suggested
Marven of the Great North Woods by Kathryn Lasky and illustrated by Kevin Hawkes Suggested
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee Highly Recommended
Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine Highly Recommended
Ronia, the Robber's Daughter by Astrid Lindgren and illustrated by Alfred Lindgren Recommended
From Anna by Jean Little Recommended
Gathering Blue by Lois Lowry Recommended
Gold Dust by Chris Lynch Suggested
Anne of Green Gables by L. M. Montgomery and illustrated by Jody Lee Highyl Recommended
Gentle Ben by Walt Morey and illustrated by John Schoenherr Recommended
The Mzungu Boy by Meja Mwangi Suggested
Shiloh by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor Highly Recommended
Chicken Sunday by Patricia Polacco Suggested
Bread And Roses, Too by Katherine Paterson Suggested
Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson and illustrated by Donna Diamond Recommended
Pink and Say by Patricia Polacco Suggested
Mrs. Katz and Tush by Patricia Polacco Suggested
Elijah's Angel by Michael J. Rosen and illustrated by Aminah Brenda Lynn Robinson Suggested
Holes by Louis Sachar Highly Recommended
Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy by Gary D. Schmidt Suggested
The Sign of the Beaver by Elizabeth George Speare Recommended
The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare Recommended
Charlotte's Web by E. B. White and illustrated by Garth Williams Highly Recommended
Crow Boy by Taro Yashima Suggested

Young Adult

The Prince and the Pauper by Mark Twain Recommended
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain and illustrated by Donald McKay Highly Recommended

April 26, 2008

Sports

We often joke with the kids that we don't have enough time for our first life much less Second Life, Sim City or the host of virtual reality games. But there is a parallel to real life that has been with us since the very beginnings of civilization and in which people have always invested huge amounts of time and effort - Sports.

Sports is so much more than just a set of games. There are broad arrays of life-lessons and values to be derived from competitive games - playing as a part of a team, giving your best effort, perseverance beyond the point of exhaustion, learning to win and lose with grace, and how to keep your head under pressure. All of these things are, of course, important life lessons, that are absorbed on the field rather than through conscious learning. The idea of sports as a metaphor for life was captured by Theodore Roosevelt in a speech he made at the Sorbonne in Paris in 1910, the year after he left the Presidency.

Theodore Roosevelt always had an especial fascination for me as a child. He seemed to be a President that in a way transcended the presidency and remained, to his benefit, more human and admirable as a human, than the constraining mantle of the presidency permits most other holders of that office to be. He said and did so many things beyond his term of presidential service that his historical mark would have been made without his having been President. Most of all, from a child's perspective, it just seemed so clear that he would have been the President with whom it would have been most fun to spend some time.

And what does this have to do with sports? Well, it is because when I think of the balancing of mind and body, of contemplation and action, the pursuit of excellence in both arenas, there are few characters that come closer to both articulating that aspiration and actually achieving it than Theodore Roosevelt. For those of us dedicated to bringing the full adventure and pleasure of reading to our children, there is also the physical world to be balanced against that world of the mind and Roosevelt was one of the most advanced practitioners of that balancing act.

Perhaps his most famous quote came from a speech he made at the Sorbonne in Paris, in 1910, the year after he left the Presidency (see Thing Finder on the homepage for the whole text which is well worth reading in toto). What most people remember is his call for action in the lines:

It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, and comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.

However, a little later he expands on this to say:
There is need of a sound body, and even more need of a sound mind. But above mind and above body stands character -- the sum of those qualities which we mean when we speak of a man's force and courage, of his good faith and sense of honor. I believe in exercise for the body, always provided that we keep in mind that physical development is a means and not an end. I believe, of course, in giving to all the people a good education. But the education must contain much besides book-learning in order to be really good. We must ever remember that no keenness and subtleness of intellect, no polish, no cleverness, in any way make up for the lack of the great solid qualities. Self-restraint, self-mastery, common sense, the power of accepting individual responsibility and yet of acting in conjunction with others, courage and resolution -- these are the qualities which mark a masterful people. Without them no people can control itself, or save itself from being controlled from the outside. I speak to a brilliant assemblage; I speak in a great university which represents the flower of the highest intellectual development; I pay all homage to intellect, and to elaborate and specialized training of the intellect; and yet I know I shall have the assent of all of you present when I add that more important still are the commonplace, every-day qualities and virtues.

The sports genre in children's books is well represented in terms of volume. There is a lot to choose from. I must admit that I am not well positioned to know the truly stellar books in this category. When growing up, moving about as often as we did in foreign countries, for some reason, we just did not have that many children's books that were about sports. Couple that with my own very wide (lots of different types of sports played in different countries) but very meager achievements on the sports field, and I feel distinctly fraudulent in providing much in terms of guidance and recommendations.

That being said, I am sure that the TTMD community will provide input to refining this initial list. There are a couple of scenarios where we think this list of sports books might be of interest. The first scenario is one in which your child is a reluctant reader, but a sports enthusiast. You may be seeing all their time invested out on the field and none in reading. The second is the reverse: your child shows little to no interest in sports but invests a great deal of time in reading.

I think I may have mentioned this at some point in the past year, but we saw the power of books to help capture the interest of a reluctant reader who was doing little if any reading. It was in Australia and one of our close friends there had two sons, the older of whom was an avid and enthusiastic sportsman who was making no progress whatsoever towards becoming a reader. The breakthrough came when she married these two worlds by presenting him the rule book for his favorite sport, cricket. Suddenly he had a book he really wanted to read. There are many paths to the world of reading and as long as it gets you there any one of them is the right path.

For reluctant readers who spend much of their time playing in competitive sports, it is fortunate that, while there may be a comparative dearth of deep and richly written sports books, there are plenty of good stories. Another bonus is that many of them are part of a series, thus allowing the child to get hooked on one book and then to discover that there is a whole set of books similar to the one he just enjoyed.

The opposite scenario, of course, involves the avid reader/reluctant sportsman. This imbalance is not necessarily healthy (one of ours is of this ilk) and among the many ways of encouraging them to get outside and to be more physically active is to feed them gripping, action-packed sports stories. It has not worked in our particular circumstance but it can.

So here are a series of books that cover many situations in the arena of sports stories; books from which the child can learn the rudiments of a sport, stories in which all the attributes of a good sport are on display - competition, respect for one's opponent, teamwork, perseverance, effort, etc., stories that are gripping because they are tightly plotted and strong on action.

Please let us know your additional suggestions and thoughts.

Picture Books

The Berenstain Bears Go Out for the Team by Stan Berenstain Suggested
Arthur Makes the Team by Stephen Krensky and illustrated by Marc Tolon Brown Suggested
Angelina Ballerina by Katharine Holabird and illustrated by Helen Craig Suggested
Take Me Out To The Ballgame by Jack Norworth and illustrated by Jim Burke Recommended

Independent Reader

Cam Jansen and the Mystery of the Babe Ruth Baseball by David A. Adler and illustrated by Susanna Natti Suggested
S.O.R. Losers by Avi Suggested
Allie's Basketball Dream by Barbara E. Barber and illustrated by Darryl Ligasan Suggested
All Star Fever by Matt Christopher and illustrated by Anna Dewdney Suggested
Goalkeeper in Charge by Matt Christopher and illustrated by Robert Hirschfeld Suggested
The Dog That Pitched a No-Hitter by Matt Christopher and illustrated by Daniel Vasconcellos Suggested
Thank You, Jackie Robinson by Barbara Cohen and illustrated by Richard Cuffari Suggested
Owen Foote, Soccer Star by Stephanie Greene and illustratde by Martha Weston Suggested
Honus and Me by Dan Gutman Highly Recommended
Jackie and Me by Dan Gutman Highly Recommended
The Million Dollar Shot by Dan Gutman Suggested
The Littlest Leaguer by Syd Hoff Suggested
Here Comes the Strikeout by Leonard Kessler Suggested
Molly Gets Mad by Suzy Kline and illustrated by Diana Cain Bluthenthal Suggested
About the B'nai Bagels by E. L. Konigsburg Recommended
Froggy Plays Soccer - by Jonathan London and illustrated by Frank Remkiewicz Suggested
Grandmas at Bat by Emily Arnold McCully Suggested
Baseball Saved Us by Ken Mochizuki and illustrated by Dom Lee Recommended
Me, Mop, and the Moondance Kid by Walter Dean Myers and illustrated by Rodney Pate Suggested
Play Ball, Amelia Bedelia by Peggy Parish and illustrated by Wallace Tripp Suggested
Dirt on Their Skirts by Doreen Rappaport and Lyndall Callan and illustrated by Earl B. Lewis Suggested
The Boy Who Saved Baseball by John H. Ritter Suggested
Bobby Baseball by Robert Kimmel Smith and illustrated by Alan Tiegreen Suggested
There's a Girl in My Hammerlock by Jerry Spinelli Suggested
Casey at the Bat by Ernest Lawrence Thayer and illustrated by Christopher H. Bing Suggested