Time for Kids: Presidents of the
United States. Liberty Street. $15.95.
Hidden Figures: Young Readers’
Edition. By Margot Lee Shetterly. Harper. $16.99.
History is a fascinating
topic that is too often rendered dull by making it into a recitation of dates
and events. It is also an important topic: it is a truism that we cannot know
where we are going if we do not know where we have been, and while the
statement smacks of cliché, it really does have value. The authors of
history-focused books aimed at young readers have in recent years done much
more to try to show the human side of history, sometimes through exploring the
day-to-day lives of the famous and sometimes by showing how many non-famous
people have contributed to events of major significance. Even a brief book that
sets out on the simple task of telling a bit about each president of the United
States can give the nation’s leaders more humanity and context than such books
used to – and that is what Time for Kids:
Presidents of the United States tries to do. It does not always succeed – for
example, the portrait of George Washington is straightforward and gives little
sense of him as a human being. But the book generally does a good job of
showing the humanity of the presidents, not only the recent ones (to whom it
easier for modern young readers to relate) but also some of those from a much
earlier time: Thomas Jefferson, for instance, is described as a “tall man with
a face full of freckles [who] was more comfortable writing down his thoughts
than speaking in public.” The book does oversimplify, not only in a way made
inevitable by the small amount of space devoted to each president but also in the
name of a lurking sense of political correctness – again using Jefferson as an
example, it notes that he wrote against slavery but “owned as many as 600
slaves in his lifetime,” a statement that unnecessarily denigrates the
sincerity of his beliefs by evading issues of economic reality in his era. Still,
little bits of interestingly humanizing information show up again and again in
these verbal portraits: Franklin Pierce at one point gave up politics to please
his wife, who disliked Washington, D.C.; William McKinley “impressed people
because he was cheerful, wise, and respectful”; after Warren Harding’s death,
his widow “destroyed many of Harding’s personal papers to avoid more gossip.”
More-recent presidents get even more personal information and, generally, more
space in the book, which includes President Trump (whose victory is said, in an
understatement, to have “surprised many experts”). And the book ends with an
explanation of the process through which a president is chosen; some specifics
on the 2016 campaign; photos taken inside the White House; and a couple of
pages on “first ladies” – including the fact that the term itself did not catch
on until the time of Lucy Hayes (wife of Rutherford B. Hayes, president from
1877 to 1881). Scarcely an extensive or in-depth study of presidents or the
presidency – and not intended as one – Time
for Kids: Presidents of the United States offers enough good, solid basics
to serve as an introduction to its subject, and enough off-the-beaten-path
information to keep the topic from becoming dull.
Margot Lee Shetterly’s Hidden Figures is one of the history
books focused on people whose names are scarcely household words. The new
edition for young readers is a fair compression of the original book for
adults, whose focus is on African-American women mathematicians who worked on
the U.S. space program at a time of pervasive racial discrimination and amid
numerous Jim Crow laws. One among very many “untold story” books and books
intended to “redress the balance” of American history by focusing specifically
on African-Americans’ contributions to it, Hidden
Figures – which has already been made into a movie – focuses more on the
human elements of the story than on the scientific ones. This may make it
easier reading, especially for younger readers, but it leads to a skimming over
of scientific matters that really could be fascinating if handled more deftly
than Shetterly does. This is less a popular-science book than yet another
overcoming-obstacles work, which is fine and admirable and all that but
scarcely has the reach that a genuinely penetrating look at the math and
science performed by these women could have had. Hidden Figures reads more like an extended, even stretched magazine
article than a 200-plus-page book: parts are repetitious, and material that a
book author could explore in depth (again, matters of math and science) tend to
be passed over quickly. The African-American female number crunchers portrayed
here had considerable responsibility for American aeronautical successes from
World War II into the space age, yet they contended again and again with
discrimination that was so extensive that it will be difficult for contemporary
young readers to understand. Their path must have been extraordinarily difficult
– yet, curiously, it does not come across that way in the book. Yes, Shetterly
asserts repeatedly that this law and that rule caused difficulties, but in her
portrayals of the women themselves, readers find such equanimity and such
heroic perseverance in the face of tremendous societal pressure that these very
human mathematicians come across as being every bit as unflappable and wooden
as U.S. presidents usually do in more-traditional history books. Hidden Figures tells a fascinating story
that is made less interesting by the way Shetterly tells it: its central
characters are brave, accomplished and very smart, but young readers (and, for
that matter, older ones reading the original version of the book) are likely to
find it difficult to relate to people portrayed as being so close to perfect.
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