Showing posts with label dad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dad. Show all posts

The Amazing Dad: More than 400 Ways to Wow the Kids Review

The Amazing Dad: More than 400 Ways to Wow the Kids
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These days fathers need all the help they can get. My eight-year-old daughter used to think I was the coolest guy in the universe, but lately I've been getting hip-checked by the backstreet boys and n'sync. I've found myself competing for her attention; and I've been trying for the past few months to pull any fun rabbit out of the hat I can find (I got one of those "juggling for klutzes" kits and practiced in secret). A few weeks ago, a buddy of mine (also a dad- and familiar with my plight) told me he'd come across a really cool book called The Amazing Dad. I pounded the pavement till I found the lone remaining copy at a local bookstore; and I was blown away- on darn near every page there's a cool trick or fun activity that any spaz can do. Every one I've tried so far has left my children laughing, squealing, and begging for more. The diagramming makes everything an easy-to-duplicate, no-brainer. This book has become my "FUN BIBLE"- I keep it hidden so as not to reveal the source of my new-found coolness. Each time the kids ask me "Where'd you learn that?", I just give them a shrug and play it off like "Oh, I've got a million of 'em- you ain't seen nothin yet"- which means they better come out with volume two before I run out of rabbits. Seriously- a dynamite book.... big thanks to Preuss and Livera for making me a cool dad again. Maybe they can teach me to sing and dance.....

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You are a father. You are the most important man on the planet. You are the maker of moments. . . the creator of memories. . . the ultimate hero in the eyes of your child! You are THE AMAZING DAD!This fun and fully-illustrated source book presents hundreds of games, gags, crafts, and tricks that will astonish and enchant children of all ages. The definitive guide for today's busy father, it shares hundreds of astounding secrets, providing dad with powers beyond his kid's wildest dreams.* Build volcanoes!* Defy gravity!* Find treasures!* Grant wishes!* Produce rainbows!* Read minds!* Create an endless supply of Wonder and Laughter! Leave a Legacy! Be a hero! Become The Amazing Dad!

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Window Seat: Reading the Landscape from the Air Review

Window Seat: Reading the Landscape from the Air
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Although "Window Seat: Reading the Landscape from the Air" by Gregory Dicum is more of an undersized coffee table book than serious writing, people like me are going to get sucked into this tome like the air through a jet turbine. You see, I, and apparently many more people than I previously thought, comprise an oddball group of travelers who actually relish the view from 35,000 feet and who always double check their reservations in advance to make sure, absolutely and unequivocally sure, that we have reserved a widow seat on our flight. Yes, we are those annoying people on the transcontinental flight where you have to call the flight attendant: "Sir, will you please pull down your widow shade....?" As one of my few fellow window seat freaks once put it, "Are you kidding? The view over the Grand Canyon is worth the hassle and cost of the flight alone!"
Therefore, the seminal concept of "Window Seat: Reading the Landscape from the Air" is exiting enough. As one who has actually taken small binoculars and maps on flights, the mere thought of a book that would help guide me along designated flight patterns was enough to give me shivers of anticipation. Upon reading a brief review in the New York Times Book Review, the book immediately went on my list.
But don't toss the topographic and Rand McNally highway maps just yet, my fellow window seaters. Apparently, we may have a monstrous case of buyer beware here. The book clearly lacks much of what many would anticipate,i.e. window seat pictures and interpretations thereof. In fact, the majority of the book contains cropped satellite photos scaled to approximately 35,000 feet or greater. Although the pictures are of exquisite quality, they are not window seatpictures, and do not necessarily offer window seaters good insights as to what they may observe on say, their twelfth trip from Houston to Orange County, California.
The book is laid out according to geographical province: the Great Plains,the Pacific Northwest, the Northeast and so forth. The emphasis is on specific features, however, with much importance given to natural phenomena such as mountains, glaciers, lakes and rivers. Human made features such as farm acreage, manufacturing, refining as well as petroleum and mining operations are also depicted. Several major metropolitan are beautifully presented from cropped satellite photos. The accompanying text may be judged as annoyingly simplistic, but the glass may be half full here. This book could easily be read and understood by late elementary - early middle school ages.
So my criticism of the book remains guarded. Window seaters need to pause for a collective breath here; what we fantasize may not be realizable. Realistically, what do you normally see at 35,000 feet looking out the window, even on a clear ride? Whitish blue, with a few outlines, brief flashes of reflected light on water, an interstate cutting through a brown desert. I almost suspect that if Dicum had submitted true window seat pictures to editors he would have been rebuffed.
Conversely, many, myself included, have done cross country pictures from low altitude prop aircraft, but as with the satellite pictures, these do not effectively present the window seat world at 35,000 feet. Perhaps a true window seat project would be an immense undertaking, requiring permission to traverse frequently used flight paths with a converted commercial or private airline, retrofitted to take aerial photography at various and sundry angles.
So Dicum may be appealing to our best flight experiences. Oh, if I could have recorded what I saw taking off from John Wayne to Minneapolis, that one clear day. A "braked" steep takeoff. A grand sweep over the Pacific Ocean and subsequent view of Orange County then Riverside County, both Interstates 15 and 5 clear as a bell, all the way back to the ocean itself. Up over Mt. San Jacinto and northeast to the Colorado River and then to the Grand Canyon.
"Sir, will you please lower your shade....?"
".....No.... thank you"

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Talk about a fresh perspective! Perched 35,000 feet in the air, Window Seat decodes the sights to be seen on any flight across North America. Broken down by region, this unusual guide features 70 aerial photographs; a fold-out map of North America showing major flight paths; profiles of each region covering its landforms, waterways, and cities; tips on spotting major sights, such as the Northern Lights, the Grand Canyon, and Disney World; tips on spotting not-so-major sights such as prisons, mines, and Interstates; and straightforward, friendly text on cloud shapes, weather patterns, the continent's history, and more. A terrific book for kids, frequent flyers, and armchair travelers alike, Window Seat is packed with curious facts and colorful illustration, proving that flying doesn't have to be a snooze. When it's possible to "read" the landscape from above, a whole world unfolds at your feet.

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