Almost Underwear: How a Piece of Cloth Traveled from Kitty Hawk to the Moon and Mars
By (Author) Jonathan Roth
Little, Brown & Company
Little, Brown Young Readers
29th October 2024
United States
Children
Non Fiction
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Space, stars and the solar system
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Humour and jokes
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Science and technology
629.10973
Hardback
40
Width 284mm, Height 224mm, Spine 10mm
428g
Did you know that a piece of cloth from the Wright Brothers' Flyer has travelled to the moon, and Mars
One day in 1903 the Wright brothers entered a department store in Ohio to buy a bolt of fabric. The plain muslin cloth was most often used to make underwear. As it happens, the Wright brothers were about to wrap the simple cloth around the ribs of a mechanical 'wing' and dramatically change the world. Sixty-six years later, in 1969, Neil Armstrong took a big leap onto the moon. With him was a swatch of the exact fabric the bicycle mechanics had purchased in 1903. Fifty-two years after that, in 2021, a remote-controlled car-sized explorer landed on Mars. Attached to the underside of a cable was a tiny piece of very old cloth-cloth that had almost become underwear. Almost Underwear is the story of that incredible piece of fabric, and the historic 'firsts' it stitches together. A Junior Library Guild Selection"Inserting cartoon figures into photos of actual sites both terrestrial and extraterrestrial, Roth explains how a certain bolt of unbleached muslin has been "woven into the fabric of history." Readers with stars (and planets) in their eyes will be fascinated by this little-known swatch of detail from the story of our space program."--Booklist, starred review
Author-illustrator Jonathan Roth has been fascinated with robotic space missions since the Viking lander sent back the first images from the surface of Mars. Jonathan, who teaches elementary art, lives in Rockville, Maryland, with his wife and two kitties in a house on a rocky planet orbiting a fiery star in a barred spiral galaxy.