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The Antidote for a Hurried Childhood
Between instant messaging, fast food, sound bites, over-scheduled activities and frantically distracting video games, when does a kid get a break to stop and think or, at least, slow down long enough to ponder? When they pick up a copy of April Pulley Sayre's latest work: The Slowest Book Ever, that's when! This is a delightfully brilliant middle-school compilation of superlatives on the slooooow side of nature, animals, plants, human body, geology, the arts and a quirky selection of miscellanea including outer space. And what middle school kid can resist superlatives? Sayre posits that some things require deep consideration over time to comprehend. But this is far from being a ponderous book about pondering. Here's an example of Sayre's off-beat and poetic (not an oxymoron) wit. And she works hard selling the idea that slowness can enhance a kid's life: I learned a lot from this book! (And I write science books for kids). It is meticulously researched and vetted. (It takes a loooong time to read the "Excruciatingly Slow Acknowledgments.) Sayre took ten years of marination to create The Slowest Book Ever. It deserves to be on a child's bookshelf for a very loooong time. -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. ![]() More... |
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