Recalls what it was like to travel from Alaska to Texas as part of a military family in the 1940s and some of the differences in how people got around then and now.
While focusing on home life, this account presents the story of Geneva Lewis, an African-American who grew up in segregated DeQuincy, Louisiana, during the 1940s.
Recalls what it was like for a young African-American girl to help prepare meals for her large family living in Madison, Illinois, in the 1930s and 1940s.
Describes the startling discovery in 1938 of a live coelacanth, a fish believed to have been extinct for sixty-five million years, and discusses the coelacanth's anatomy, habitat, and life cycle.
Presents an introduction to sea slugs, discussing the variety of shape and color that exists within the nudibranch family of sea slug, and looking at how they breathe, eat, move, and fend off predators.