Bet you didn't know Fascinating, far-out, fun-tastic facts!

Book - 2017

"Did you know that the first stop signs were black and white? Or that a litter of kittens is called a kindle? There's a lot to know and we bet you'll have fun learning these fun, far-out facts in the next super series from National Geographic Kids! Based on a favorite department in Nat Geo Kids magazine, this book is chock-full of fascinating facts, silly stats, and catchy little knowledge nuggets in all kinds of cool categories, from astronomy and dinosaurs to revolutions and breakfast. Special features include Extreme Weirdness, Strange Places, Wacky World, and more"--Provided by publisher.

Saved in:

Children's Room Show me where

j031.02/National
0 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room j031.02/National Due Feb 26, 2025
Children's Room j031.02/National Due Feb 21, 2025
Subjects
Published
Washington, D.C. : National Geographic [2017]
Language
English
Corporate Author
National Geographic Society (U.S.)
Corporate Author
National Geographic Society (U.S.) (-)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
192 pages : color illustrations ; 31 cm
Audience
980L
ISBN
9781426328374
9781426328381
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

It's a sucker's "bet" if ever there was one, as every page of this brightly illustrated browser's delight features a multiplicity of mind-boggling facts.Cued up in groups of 10 per spread (with occasional variations) beneath about 70 topical rubrics, pithy gosh-wow-isms in boldface type and emphatic colors focus mainly on the natural world with excursions into history, holidays, and curious cultural practices. Sharp photos and graphic imagesmostly of animals, with human figures a rare but diverse minorityin a range of sizes are treats for the eyes. So too are claims that rats can't throw up, raw termites taste like pineapple, "One cyclops from Greek mythology liked to snack on humans," and hundreds of other did-you-knows to absorbent young brains. Wordier excursions to, for instance, visit Petra and Machu Picchu or to explain the differences between "affect" and "effect" or macarons and macaroons offer changes of pace, but the whole outing is really tailor-made for dipping and flipping at random. And, wild as some entries seem, there aren't any patent absurdities, even when enthusiasm trumps precise language and notwithstanding a breezy assurance standing in for actual source citations that everything here is "carefully researched." A bodacious wellspring of random knowledge. (index) (Nonfiction. 7-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.