Picture of author.

Vicki Lansky (1942–2017)

Author of The Best Baby Name Book in the Whole Wide World

57+ Works 2,078 Members 25 Reviews

About the Author

Vicki Lansky was born in Louisville, Kentucky on January 6, 1942. She received a B.A. from Connecticut College in 1963. She worked as a buyer for a New York City clothing store, as a freelance photographer, and as a childbirth education teaching assistant. In 1974, she and several other mothers show more collaborated on a babyfood cookbook. When none of the publishers they approached were interested in the book, Lansky and her husband decided to publish the book themselves and distribute it from home. Their creative promotional efforts turned Feed Me! I'm Yours into one of the bestselling cookbooks in its category. Lansky found her niche as a writer and publisher of parenting materials. She wrote more than 30 books during her lifetime including The Taming of the C.A.N.D.Y. Monster, Practical Parenting Tips for the First Five Years, KoKo Bear's New Potty, and Fat-Proofing Your Children. She received the 1990 Parent's Choice Award for Vicky Lansky's Divorce Book for Parents: Helping Children Cope with Divorce and Its Aftermath. In 1979, she began publishing a bimonthly newsletter called Practical Parenting, which led to a nationally syndicated radio feature. She was the founder and owner of The Book Peddlars, a publisher and literary agency. She was also a columnist for Family Circle magazine and for Sesame Street Parents magazine. She died from nonalcoholic cirrhosis on January 15, 2017 at the age of 75. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: By Vicki Lansky, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=52494312

Works by Vicki Lansky

The Best Baby Name Book in the Whole Wide World (1984) — Author — 294 copies, 1 review
Feed Me, I'm Yours (1974) 213 copies, 2 reviews
Practical Parenting Tips (1982) 62 copies, 1 review
101 Ways to Be a Special Dad (1993) 43 copies, 1 review
Koko Bear's New Potty (1986) 32 copies
Vicki Lansky's Kids Cooking (1987) 31 copies
Child Proof Your Home (1992) 21 copies
Dear Babysitter Handbook (1989) 12 copies
Transparent Tape (1995) 11 copies, 1 review
Sing Along Birthday Fun (1989) 8 copies
It Worked for Me (1985) 2 copies
Kid's Cooking 2 copies
Best New Baby Tips (2001) 1 copy

Associated Works

Do They Ever Grow Up? 101 Cartoons about the Terrible Twos and Beyond (1978) — Preface, some editions — 84 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

activities (9) babies (21) baby (13) baby names (15) baking soda (9) children (39) cleaning (14) cookbook (45) cookbooks (16) cooking (42) divorce (44) family (33) fiction (9) food (9) games (10) health (19) home economics (9) household (17) household hints (9) how-to (8) names (32) non-fiction (76) nutrition (12) own (14) parenting (130) potty training (20) pregnancy (15) recipes (11) reference (68) to-read (12)

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

25 reviews
Really not that good. A very large proportion of the ‘Over 500 Uses’ mentioned are essentially the same thing. So rather than suggesting you use a paste of baking soda and water as a mild abrasive to clean your bath, sink, or oven, she lists each use as a separate tip. Likewise the way that ‘sprinkle baking soda inside your shoes to combat foot odour’ is listed in three separate hints on one page (as well as again in quite a few other locations – slightly different wording each show more time, but it’s the same hint in each instance). And don’t get me started on how many times she recycles ‘store an open or perforated-topped box of baking soda in location X to remove unpleasant odours’.

She also has a bit of an obsession with banishing food smells – fish, poultry, wild game, cauliflower, turnips and beans are all apparently too smelly for her when cooking, so adding baking soda is her answer. (Fair enough, if the smells really bother her. But it strikes me as some serious overkill, and doesn’t exactly encourage me to try her other food-related tips. I like flavour!)

And finally there is the matter of the little disclaimers. To be fair, she does state early on that she has not personally tried ever one of these tricks herself. But why not? Comments like ‘are said to’, ‘many feel’, and ‘may’ don’t exactly inspire confidence in the courses of action she’s proposing, and make the book feel poorly planned and researched.

There are some good tips in here, but only two or three that I didn’t already know from other sources, (and quite a few she hasn’t even mentioned). I’m not surprised it sells well – people want to know how to stretch their money ever further, and most of us are distrustful of the chemical cocktails in many commercial products. But even allowing for the fact that this book is theoretically limited to the uses of one substance, it manages to be both padded and also lightweight. (Great for a winter jacket; lousy for a book of hints.) Jackie French and Shannon Lush are both better sources of information on this sort of thing.
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½
A nice little book that gives Dads trying to figure out what to do when he has the kids. Some of the ideas are no brainers, while others are more thoughtful and interesting. definitely a book to give to a new father to help him wit neat ideas to entertain children.
Much better than "The Well Fed Baby" this book is for real people who need ideas on what to feed their kids (that they'll actually eat.) This earlier version of the book is hands-down better than later versions since it offers more variety. But the later versions deal more with health issues and allergies.
The title is rather over-congratulatory. This book is certainly NOT the best in the world. It's a fairly slim volume, with a reasonable quantity of names, but nothing particularly out-of-the-ordinary. Nor does it go into much detail about name origins or meanings. At least that's my recollection.
½

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Associated Authors

Jane Prince Illustrator
Erma Bombeck Introduction
Lynn Johnston Cover artist
Martha Campbell Illustrator

Statistics

Works
57
Also by
1
Members
2,078
Popularity
#12,364
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
25
ISBNs
179
Languages
5

Charts & Graphs