Illustrated Guide to Home Chemistry Experiments

(Amelia) #1
Preface xi

Christmas morning, 1964. I was 11 years old. My younger brother and I arose at the crack


of dawn and noisily rushed downstairs to find out what was under the tree. Our parents


followed us, bleary-eyed.


Santa had been good to us that year. Colorfully wrapped presents were scattered—not just


under the tree, but across most of the living room floor. Being boys, we started tearing open


the presents with no thought at all for the care that had gone into wrapping them. We were


after the loot.


There were the inevitable disappointments: sweaters from Grandma, school clothes from


Aunt Betty, and hand-knitted stocking caps for both of us from Pete and Sarah, our elderly


next-door neighbors. But there was plenty of good stuff, too. Sports equipment and a cap


pistol for my younger brother. A battery-powered Polaris nuclear submarine that actually


fired small plastic missiles. A bicycle for my brother and a BB gun for me! Lots of books, the


kind we both liked to read. A casting set, with a lead furnace and molds to make toy soldiers.


As we opened the packages, my brother and I mentally checked off items against our wish


lists. We’d both gotten everything we asked for. Almost. One item had been at the top of every


iteration of my wish list since the Sears Christmas Wish Book had arrived, and that item was


nowhere to be found. I searched frantically through the piles of discarded wrapping paper,


hoping I’d overlooked a box. It wasn’t there.


My parents had been watching my brother and me ripping through gifts like Tasmanian


Devils. Just as I’d decided that I hadn’t gotten the one gift that I really, really wanted, my


mom and dad called me into the kitchen. There it sat, on the kitchen table: exactly what I’d


been hoping for. It was already unboxed and spread wide open to show the contents. My


father said, “This is from your mother and me. It is not a toy.”


Preface

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