Monday, January 5, 2009

Does an Elephant Take a Bath or Confusing Love with Obsession

Does an Elephant Take a Bath?

Author: Fred Ehrlich

Bathing is an important part of every young child's day. It's also an important part of some animals' days. In Does an Elephant Take a Bath?, children will learn why both animals and people need to keep themselves clean.

Children's Literature

As part of the "Early Experiences" series, this picture book along with the others posits a series of improbable situations. It is interesting that the author chooses an elephant, because in some cases they do get baths and generally enjoy the water as noted in other books, but in the wild they tend to use their trunks to spray water all over themselves. The other animals featured have other ways to keep clean—some like zebras take a dust bath to get rid of fleas and ticks; others use their rough tongues to groom themselves and their young. Many primates groom each other by picking bugs and debris from their fur. People take baths and showers to keep clean and some use the services of manicurists, hairdressers, and barbers to help them stay well-groomed. Like the other books in the series this one ends with a question—"How do you keep clean?" The illustrations are done in a cartoon style which makes the lesson easier to swallow. The final scene and endpapers are also amusing.



Read also The Herb Garden Cookbook or Always in Season

Confusing Love with Obsession: When Being in Love Means Being in Control

Author: John D Moor

Confusing Love with Obsession is a must-read for anyone involved in a dangerously obsessive relationship. Fueled by an overwhelming fear of abandonment, people involved in obsessive relationships will go to extreme lengths to control their partner. Here, John D. Moore draws from excruciating real-life stories and personal experience to reveal the inner workings of obsessive relationships. More important, Confusing Love with Obsession helps readers develop a new self-awareness and healthy relationship--free from preoccupation with an object of obsession.



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