By Julie Edwards
Copyright 1974
Pax amor et lepos in iocando
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0Y7vzjxlEdFdzHuR76l084fKQuoPo91OAJXOtF8YcqeoOXaYfGViMyEKfGEt7_Eh2gYVb2V81459EsOlG5-ZHe29DHxMmYGZOKCSxXNaE6o3SPaT_ojcQQ9NrEJEP0c3hsTZBy4Olpf2-/s1600/Whangdoodles.jpg)
One of my favorite characters the children meet is the Whiffle Bird. She is a fluffy, feathery, colorful creature,
who protectively shouts out warnings of danger to the travelers. Unfortunately, it takes a while for them to take
the warnings seriously. After climbing
on the Jolly Boat, which only starts to move after you tell it jokes, the
Whifflebird shouts, “YOU’RE BEING TAKEN FOR A RIDE”. Only too late did they realize they were
being warned of a deception.
What I found unusual about this book is the combination of
crazy fantasy and imagination mixed with serious science. The professor’s area of expertise is genetics,
but don’t take his science lessons as fact.
This book was written in 1974, after all. The point is clear though; knowledge, skill,
determination, imagination, and faith were all necessary for the children and
the professor to reach Whangdoodleland
and to grant the Whangdoodle his heart’s desire.
Knowledge and faith
can and should coexist.
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