Why can't I feel the Earth spinning? & other vital questions about science

James Doyle, 1972-

Book - 2018

Why Can't I Feel the Earth Spinning? is an irreverent and informative introduction to tricky questions about science. How do we know what dinosaurs looked like? Why does medicine taste so bad? Why don't airplanes fall down? Why Can't I Feel the Earth Spinning? encourages children to start asking and answering questions for themselves. The book is structured around twenty-two questions. Each section explores the question and answer with detailed illustrations, photographs, or diagrams and then asks further questions on a similar theme. Children learn about how their bodies work, why trees' leaves are green, why people dream, and whether "The Cloud" is really a cloud. Written with humor and full of fun illustrati...ons, Why Can't I Feel the Earth Spinning? is the perfect primer for young inquisitive minds and budding scientists.

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j500/Doyle
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room j500/Doyle Due Dec 8, 2024
Subjects
Published
London : Thames & Hudson Ltd 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
James Doyle, 1972- (author)
Other Authors
Claire Goble (illustrator)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
95 pages : illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780500651186
  • What Is Science?
  • Why Are Trees Green?
  • How Do We Know What Dinosaurs Looked Like?
  • What Do Plants Eat?
  • Why Do I Have to Wash?
  • Are Maps Always Right?
  • Why Does My Hair Grow?
  • Why Does Medicine Taste So Bad?
  • How Do Surgeons Know What To Take Out?
  • Why Is Bread Full Of Bubbles?
  • Why Do Stars Twinkle?
  • How Was The Earth Made?
  • What's Inside A Black Hole?
  • Why Do Sirens Sound Weird When They Go Past?
  • How Do Airplanes Stay Up?
  • How Do We Know The World Is Round?
  • Why Is the Sea Blue?
  • Where Do Mountains Come From?
  • What Makes Thunder And Lightning?
  • Could I Live On Mars?
  • Is "The Cloud" A Real Cloud?
  • Why Do I Dream?
Review by Kirkus Book Review

From the creators of Why Is Art Full of Naked People? (2016), a set of equally momentous questions in astronomy, physics, biology, and technologywith pithy answers.Presented in no discernible order, the several dozen questions range from "What is science?" ("Oh nothing muchscience is everything, science is everywhere and science is everything that has ever happened in the whole history of time!") and "What's inside a black hole?" to "Can things live on my face?" (Yes.) Doyle goes for an equally casual tone in his short answers, and though he tends to wander off on side tracks, along with picking up some dandy vocabulary ("dendrochronology" "oneirology" "spaghettified"), readers with inquiring minds will come away painlessly filled in on a broad variety of topics. This is not to say that Doyle's facts are always trustworthynitrogen is not a mineral, stars do too move, astronauts don't float in space because the gravity there is lower than on Earth, 44,000 gallons of rocket fuel isn't enough to "fill up 42,000 cars"but they are mostly sound enough. The illustrations are a likewise playful combination of decorative motifs and line drawings of white-faced cartoon human figures by Goble and science art, stills from classic films, stock photos (often comical ones), historical images, museum paintings, and old book illustrations. A few slips but overall a brisk and witty grab bag of science words and wonders. (index, glossary) (Nonfiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.