Medicine Hat News

Doctor who wrote ‘The Care & Keeping of You’ offers boy book

- LEANNE ITALIE

NEW YORK Attention boys: You will grow taller, sprout hair, sweat more, develop muscles, fight breakouts, acquire deeper voices and experience changes to your private parts. And those are just the basics! Dr. Cara Natterson, the pediatrici­an and Los Angeles mom who has connected with millions of young girls through her bestsellin­g “Care & Keeping of You" books has now written one specifical­ly for boys. She takes a head-to-toe approach to puberty and adolescenc­e after years of requests from parents for a book boys can claim as their own.

“Boys have very little informatio­n in the print world. Our social conversati­on about puberty has been largely directed at girls,” Natterson said in a recent interview. “We are really good at talking to girls about puberty and body changes and social changes and emotional changes, but we are really bad as a society in talking to boys about it.”

Mixed with all the usual stuff are facts about how genes work and the ups and downs of early bloomers versus late ones. But Natterson goes deeper in her “Guy Stuff: The Body Book for Boys,” serving up the difference between confident guys and arrogant guys, for instance, and urging boys to not only own their own personal spaces but honour those of others.

Natterson’s advice is written in meat-and-potatoes language with a touch of boy-friendly sass and lightheart­ed illustrati­ons covering all contingenc­ies, such as how to care for greasy hair and dandruff. As for ears, keep 'em clean, guys, Natterson counsels, while also dispensing advice on such things as caring for piercings and the dangers of blasting music directly into one’s head via earbuds and headphones.

She does the same for eyes (“Seriously, don't stare into bright lights”) and for the mouth (she extols the virtues of flossing). Natterson takes on more embarrassi­ng stuff, too, like boxers versus briefs.

As for the face, she does some myth busting: “Shaving doesn't make your hair grow back thicker, but it might look that way,” she writes. “That’s because when you shave, you cut the hair straight across, and the blunt end looks bigger than the narrow, tapered end of uncut hair.”

Good to know, especially for the 9- to-12-year-old set Natterson hopes to reach, along with older boys who may read the book.

Much of the more general informatio­n is valuable for girls, too, with similar tips in the three books Natterson wrote for them. In addition, she has put out companion volumes for moms and daughters to share, with how-to scripts and a joint blank journal that includes writing prompts — all intended to start potentiall­y sensitive conversati­ons. Natterson and American Girl Publishing put out the first book for girls, “The Care & Keeping of You,” in 1998, later updating it and splitting it into two volumes, one for younger girls and one for older girls. In all, Natterson’s books for girls have sold nearly 6 million copies and remain favourites among educators, doctors and parents, said Natterson, who has two kids, a 12-year-old boy and a 14-year-old girl.

 ?? AMERICAN GIRL PUBLISHING VIA AP ?? This undated photo provided by American Girl Publishing shows the cover of the book "Guy Stuff: The Body Book For Boys."
AMERICAN GIRL PUBLISHING VIA AP This undated photo provided by American Girl Publishing shows the cover of the book "Guy Stuff: The Body Book For Boys."

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