Subtitle Bringing Up Baby [Chrome]

Susan didn't care for measurements. She lived in a world of impulse and accidental destruction. Within an hour of meeting David, she had managed to dent his car, tear his tuxedo, and—most pivotally—embroil him in the care of "Baby," a tame leopard sent to her from Brazil.

David Huxley was a man of precise measurements and ancient bones. He had spent years meticulously assembling a Brontosaurus skeleton, needing only one final piece—the "intercostal clavicle"—to complete his life's work. His world was grey, quiet, and perfectly categorized. Then he met Susan Vance. subtitle Bringing Up Baby

The phrase "" is most famously associated with the 1938 screwball comedy film, but it also serves as the subtitle for Sheila Hardy's book, A 1950s Mother . Susan didn't care for measurements

to the birth of the modern consumer household. David Huxley was a man of precise measurements

The story follows their frantic journey across the Connecticut countryside. David, desperate to remain respectable for his upcoming marriage and a million-dollar museum donation, finds himself chasing a leopard through gardens and singing "I Can't Give You Anything But Love, Baby" to keep the cat calm.

that replaced the communal wisdom of previous generations.

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