Review of Almost Underwear: How a Piece of Cloth Traveled from Kitty Hawk to the Moon and Mars

Almost Underwear: How a Piece of Cloth Traveled from Kitty Hawk to the Moon and Mars Almost Underwear: How a Piece of Cloth Traveled from Kitty Hawk to the Moon and Mars
by Jonathan Roth; illus. by the author
Primary, Intermediate    Ottaviano/Little, Brown    40 pp.
8/24    9780316525541    $18.99

A small scrap of unbleached muslin (typically used for underwear in the early 1900s) traveled to the moon and back with the Apollo 11 astronauts in the summer of 1969. Sixty-six years before the flight, that swatch was part of a fabric wing that made the most consequential flight in aviation history. Though the Wright brothers’ Flyer traveled only 120 feet on the sandy beaches of North ­Carolina, it changed humankind’s relationship with gravity forever. Fifty-two years after the moon landing, 118 years after Kitty Hawk, a smaller piece of fabric from that same scrap took another historic flight, aboard NASA’s Ingenuity, the autonomous helicopter that made the first controlled flight from the surface of Mars in 2021. Combining historical photographs and NASA concept art with the author’s ­cartoonish illustrations creates an enjoyable informational picture book that connects the past to the present. Roth’s clear and compelling narrative follows the swatch’s fascinating journey through the history of flight. An extensive author’s note fleshes out the fabric’s many “­adventures.”

From the ">September/October 2024 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Eric Carpenter
Eric Carpenter
Eric Carpenter is the school librarian at Fred A. Toomer Elementary School in Atlanta, Georgia.

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