43°F
weather icon Mostly Cloudy

‘In One End and Out the Other’ is flush with facts

You are a big kid.

No, you’€™re not a baby anymore. You can tie your shoes, comb your own hair, and nobody needs to feed you. You can even use the potty by yourself — but what happens after you do? In the book “€œIn One End and Out the Other” by Dr. Mike Goldsmith, illustrated by Richard Watson, you’€™ll find out.

So let’€™s say you’€™re hungry, and Mom hands you an apple. Just like gasoline in a car, food is fuel for your body, and the first step in making that fuel is the spit in your mouth that helps “€œmush up the food.”€

Once you’€™ve finished a bite of your apple and swallowed, the “€œgloopy”€ mixture goes down your esophagus and, 10 seconds later, it enters your stomach, where it becomes something called “€œchyme.”€ Your stomach works the chyme, then sends it to your small intestines, where nutrients are absorbed and, about seven hours later, it enters your large intestines, where water is removed. After another day or so, digestion is complete, and you’€™ll be ready to flush what’€™s left down the toilet. Did you know that you’€™ll spend at least three months of your life sitting on the potty?

But once you push the flusher … then what?

Everything you flush goes down a long pipe, through your house, under the ground and into a sewer pipe. There, it mixes with water and things that other people have flushed; the water moves it all below the streets into the sewage treatment plant where it gets dumped through screens into chambers and becomes sludge.

Then, says Dr. Goldsmith, “€œgerms break down the sludge in the same way your body breaks down food.”€

At some sewage plants, sludge gets dried and becomes food for plants, while “€œdirty water”€ is cleaned with “€œgood bacteria”€ that makes it safe to put back into rivers or to use on lawns and fields. Other sewage plants do different things with the waste they receive, but it’€™s all treated so it’€™s safe and won’€™t hurt people or animals.

You thought you could breathe a sigh of relief once Potty Training was over, but then your child began asking questions that you couldn’€™t quite answer. That’€™s when you need “€œIn One End and Out the Other.”€

With a mix of words kids feel comfortable using, and real technical and medical terms, Goldsmith explains what happens from mouth to months later, not only for humans but for plants and animals as well. This information — and the trivial bits that accompany it — is helped along by illustrations by Watson, both in the main part of the book and in the fun-to-find flaps that give kids even more knowledge about the everyday function of their bodies and their cities.

Even though I’€™m well beyond the target age of this book (5- to 7-year-olds), I learned a lot from it, and I think your kids undoubtedly will, too. If you’€™re looking for answers to stICKY questions, “€œIn One End and Out the Other”€ is flush with facts.

— View publishes Terri Schlichenmeyer’s reviews of books for children weekly.

 

 

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
Former homeless Las Vegas teen spotlights ongoing issue

“I consider myself lucky because I had a backpack,” he said at a TED Talk in June in Traverse City, Michigan. “And because along the way I found some of the most beautiful, compassionate and courageous people that not only helped me through this time but who have left a lasting impression stamped on my heart.”

Robert Hoge’s memoir ‘Ugly’ is beautiful

You’re having a bad hair day. You feel fat in those jeans. And you’ll never complain again, once you’ve read “Ugly” by Robert Hoge.

‘Cool Nature’ will help young scientists feel smart

Just by looking at them, you can tell what kind of rocks they are and where they came from. You also know a little about biology,astronomy and what makes you tick, so why not learn more by reading “Cool Nature” by Amy-Jane Beer?

‘Cool Nature’ will help young scientists feel smart

Just by looking at them, you can tell what kind of rocks they are and where they came from. You also know a little about biology,astronomy and what makes you tick, so why not learn more by reading “Cool Nature” by Amy-Jane Beer?

Kids will love creeping through the pages of ’Frightlopedia’

Ever since your child has been young, (s)he’s known that you’d be around for comfort when things got too scary. Well, stand by.What’s inside “Frightlopedia” may still leave you on sentry duty.

New Berkeley Breathed book will charm all ages

I have no socks. Author Berkley Breathed just charmed them off me. Kids will love the colorfully wild illustrations and the basic tale of love and friendship in “The Bill the Cat Story.” They’ll appreciate Bill’s underwear and his goofy “ack.”

Engage teen curiosity with ‘Unlock the Weird!’

While parts of it may be disturbing to wee ones, trivia-loving kids ages 12 to adult will pick this book, for sure. When enjoying “Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Unlock the Weird!” curiosity is key.

Summer tall-tale adventure relies on illustrations to spin story

Lies, liars, lying. Your child has undoubtedly heard those words lately on the news, and he knows better, right? But, sometimes, embellishment is oh-so-tempting, and “The Truth about My Unbelievable Summer” is a perfect example.