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A Caldecott winner demystifies the machinery of the computer age with the help of a charming woolly mammoth in a completely updated version of an earlier work which details the latest innovations from cars and microchips to watches and lasers. Review: As good as I remember - Fun book for kids and their parents Review: Should be required reading for all children and their parents - Not sure how many of these I have purchased, but "many" between this and the first version. There is no other book I know which can connect kids and fathers better than this book. It helps fathers (or mothers) answer those endless list of "why and how" questions about hundreds of things we use and see daily. I think the age range should be listed as 5 to 85 for this book. Most readers will learn something they didn't know or understand. It helps instill an interest in science, tools, helpful products and processes with make our modern society work or work better. It can and should be the basis for hundreds of projects parents can to with their kids. It becomes a reference book in home. Fathers tell me it needs to be re-read or paged through every couple of years as children grow and learn more and gain depth of understanding. It is sort science without the math and "may" just spark the interest to learn and use the math.
| Best Sellers Rank | #40,639 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #72 in Science & Technology for Teens (Books) #13,849 in Children's Books (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 420 Reviews |
J**E
As good as I remember
Fun book for kids and their parents
R**-
Should be required reading for all children and their parents
Not sure how many of these I have purchased, but "many" between this and the first version. There is no other book I know which can connect kids and fathers better than this book. It helps fathers (or mothers) answer those endless list of "why and how" questions about hundreds of things we use and see daily. I think the age range should be listed as 5 to 85 for this book. Most readers will learn something they didn't know or understand. It helps instill an interest in science, tools, helpful products and processes with make our modern society work or work better. It can and should be the basis for hundreds of projects parents can to with their kids. It becomes a reference book in home. Fathers tell me it needs to be re-read or paged through every couple of years as children grow and learn more and gain depth of understanding. It is sort science without the math and "may" just spark the interest to learn and use the math.
A**L
Every Child Should Have This Book
I bought this book after my little boy discovered and fell in love with a copy at preschool. He poured over the illustrations and I was amazed at how involved he got in it. He's not normally very bookish, he'd rather be out climbing trees and jumping on the trampoline but this book captures his imagination like nothing else. He will finish dinner and then go to the living room, grab this book and sit looking at the illustrations for the longest time, even though we've had the book about six months he's still totally into it. He's five now and can't read but I think he'll love it even more when he's able to read the information. My daughter for some reason isn't very interested in it but it's here if she wants it. My son will bring the book over to his dad and they will discuss the pictures and daddy with fill in the information. Such a neat book for little kids who are fascinated with how things work, and a great reference for every home!
L**R
Lots of GREAT information!
Very detailed and has nearly every invention in it. That is what makes this book have five stars, but I gave it four because the way the pages are laid out is a bit confusing for me. Facts and details are clear, but the actual lay out is tough to take in--there is a lot going on on each page. I think this was done to try to keep all of the info on one page or set of pages, but it is just a bit overwhelming. Also, only a handful of colors were used to illustrate the pictures in the book and that makes it a bit industrial looking, versus artistic. Given the topic of the book, this was probably deliberate!
S**F
We love this book!
I ordered this for my very curious 6 year old son, who thinks like an engineer already, but the whole family is enjoying it. It's a quality book with great information and illustrations that's fun to flip through or use for reference every time he asks how or why something works. It's target audience is probably much older (9 to adult?), but it's a great coffee table book and reference to have around for adults. Younger children will enjoy looking at the illustrations while a parent simplifies the explanations. Every day objects are fascinating to anyone who likes to see how things work or just has a curious nature. It has inspired an interest in science and invention and we're looking forward to taking things apart so he can see how they work with the help of this book. It would be a great gift for teachers as well!
J**S
Ingenuity. Imagination. Depictions. Diagrams.
Put these four things together--ingenuity, imagination, depictions, diagrams-- and you have a double ID toward understanding how things work. David Macaulay and Neil Ardley put together a magnificent volume for children and children at heart containing a way of understanding the laws of physics and mechanics. The first illustration even shows God busy creating the rotation of the earth. Then they go to the earth where wooly mammoths lived and pick up one to take us through the history of mechanics, machines, and the like. Dozens of movements in five sections: waves, electricity, automation, digital domain, and machines show us just how easy these things are to understand done in drawerings. Just as in child's play, there is no seeming order to the arrangement of items in the book. For example here are a few pages next to each other: vacuum cleaners, aqualungs or oxygen tanks, the toilet tank, the water meter, dishwasher, spray nozzle, fire extinguisher. Are you seeing an order? Yes, so am I. Flipping over a hundred pages, I find the jet engine, rocket engines, nuclear power, nuclear weapons, fallout, nuclear reactor. OK, a definite pattern. Another hundred pages show these topics: movie camera, movie projector, printing, paper making, printing plate, printing press, bookbinding. More discernible order and logical arrangement. One last check: scanner, bits and bytes, flash memory, magnetic storage, microchip, processor, software. We know where we are and recognize the order--a computer and its parts. This reviewer has a suggestion for the reader. Once you have this book in hand, take it home, take it out every night and read a comfortable number of pages. If you have a child, read one page, discuss it, put this one away and take out a night-night book to read. If this is just your book, read several pages. By the time you have finished the book, you will have added dozens of operating systems to the computer banks in your own brain, making your child and/or yourself an expert in the way things work.
M**E
Fun "Textbook"
I bought this book because I'd always see it at my mother-in-law's house and never seemed to be able to spend as much time with it as I'd like. I am a 34-year old mechanical engineer who is dazzled at how clearly and simply Macaulay explains and illustrates things I'm supposed to know so much about. At my level of knowledge it acts like a textbook, except that it is just a lot of fun to read. He doesn't overexplain, so each page is a bit like a puzzle with enough clues to figure out how things work that if you spend some time with it, you'll figure it out. So as a "way things work" professional, I find this a fun way to become better at my job. Having said that, it is written and illustrated in a way that anyone with a curiosity, young or old, will really enjoy it, regardless of their background.
M**N
A book that inspires curiosity and a desire to learn more about the science of how things work
I ordered the edition of this book as a textbook for my son who is teaching "early college Introduction to Engineering" to advanced high school students. As a Master Teacher retired, years ago I ordered the original THE WAY THINGS WORK and learned so very much about the history of engineering and the science of all motion, its principles and its advanced achievements-----covering all kinds of engineering achievements in Civil, Mechanical, Chemical, Electrical, etc. I suggest that any parent who has a child who is interested in science or engineering of all kinds purchase this book and keep it on the coffee/cocktail/family room table. It is a real "motivator" for any child-----and inspires curiosity in all things made by man and all things of the universe. It is a book that all our guests of all ages, male and female, have noticed, picked up and become completely absorbed in it during their visits. It is a must for all families with children!!!!! It inspires one to learn.
B**D
Fun Bedtime Book for Child and Parent
My husband loves to read to my daughter every night but she is not very interested in the standard fairytale. They had already read through all the little essays in a book called "How Come?" about 5 times so I thought I'd get them this for Christmas. It's been a great find. Although the concepts are a bit advanced for my daughter (she's only 6) she loves the pictures and asks lots of questions so it makes for a great 'quality time' story as she and her Dad then spend a lot of time talking about the ideas. Strongly recommended for kids (and parents) who like this kind of informative reading.
A**R
A fun way of discovery
This is one of my favourite books and should be read by every teenager. The illustrations are a delight and make the theories most enteresting and enjoyable.
C**C
Precioso
Muy instructivo, ampliado con respecto al primero. Es más un libro para adultos que para niños, la verdad, porque los fundamentos son complicados y las explicaciones, aunque claras, requieren un cierto nivel. Pero muy entretenido.
S**N
Great for kids who like to take things apart
My boys have thoroughly enjoyed pouring through this book. They are both the type of kids that want to see how things work and take stuff apart. Now my door knobs and clocks are being left alone as they read this book instead. My 10 yo was even taking it with him to keep reading everywhere we went. It complements a beginning physics course as well for homeschoolers.
C**N
the new way
très intéressant
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