"Almost too much fun" You might argue that getting the Four Questions asked at the Seder is merely a performance moment for the youngest who can articulate them, but that the real business comes afterward. You would be wrong, of course, and nothing proves it more than a new book, 300 Ways to Ask The Four Questions. Have a few of them on the table at Passover. If the task of telling of the Exodus is to view ourselves in every generation as if we came out of Egypt, this absolutely wonderful book enhances the essential experience by making us imagine the many destinations that Exodus did or might produce. What does a Japanese Seder taste like (wasabi bitter herbs)? How did my great-great grandparents explain things to a curious Polish neighbor (carefully)? What passes for chametz and matzah in Klingon (don't want to think about it)? If the haggadah is a time trip, authors Spiegel and Stein are our world-wide travel agents. Book your ticket on WhyIsThisNight.com. And the book is just so much fun, whether I am flipping through the pages or trying to put the sounds in my own mouth. Why is it almost too much fun? Because it might wind up delaying the answer to the fifth question at the Seder: When do we eat? Review by Rabbi Jack Moline