Showing posts with label childrens books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label childrens books. Show all posts

New Directions in Picturebook Research (Children's Literature and Culture) Review

New Directions in Picturebook Research (Children's Literature and Culture)
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New Directions in Picturebook Research (Children's Literature and Culture) ReviewRoutledge makes a huge contribution to the debate on the importance of picturebook research. Unfortunately, the two books that I've purchased at Amazon (this one and "Postmodern Picturebooks") look like fake editions because of the cheap paper and the homemade look of the binding. Not what you expect from a $100 book!New Directions in Picturebook Research (Children's Literature and Culture) OverviewIn this new collection, children's literature scholars from twelve different countries contribute to the ongoing debate on the importance of picturebook research, focusing on aesthetic and cognitive aspects of picture books. Contributors take interdisciplinary approaches that integrate different disciplines such as literary studies, art history, linguistics, narratology, cognitive psychology, sociology, memory studies, and picture theory. Topics discussed include intervisuality, twist endings, autobiographical narration, and metaliterary awareness in picturebooks. The essays also examine the narrative challenges of first-person narratives, ellipsis, frame breaking, and mindscape as new paradigms in picturebook research. Tying picturebook studies to studies in childhood, multimodality, and literacy, this anthology is representative of the different opportunities for research in this emerging field.

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The Early Human World Review

The Early Human World
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The Early Human World ReviewThis has to be the greatest series on ancient history! When have you come across a series of history books that presents things in a fun, detailed, often humorous way? My children talk about the chapters we read long after we are done with our lessons. They retain the facts and love the time we spend learning them. I was looking for a series with a different approach to history textbooks, when I came across The World in Ancient Times series. Those books are everything I had hoped for and more:
captivating, easy to read, full of wonderful anecdotes, and pictures. They have a secular approach to history, with attention to details so well put together I read them ahead of the kids just for the fun of it! This first volume starts from the beginning with the origin of earth and ends with human settlements in North America (about 1000 years ago). These books are comparable in tone and excellence to the Joy Hakim series of historical science books (Aristotle Leads the Way) which we are using as well.The Early Human World OverviewA six-million-year-old jaw bone in Ethiopia proves to be a piece of the earliest hominid discovered-so far. Big Mama, who used a tree branch to escape from a zoo in Holland, is found sipping chocolate milk at a local restaurant. Nandy, a 50,000-year-old skeleton surrounded by flower pollen in Iraq, casts doubt on the beastly reputation of an early hominid. Found frozen in the Alps, Ötzi reveals what people in Europe ate 5,000 years ago. Ardipithecus ramidus kadabba, a chimpanzee, a Neandertal, and the Iceman are just some of the characters who make up The Early Human World.Peter Robertshaw and Jill Rubalcaba tell the story of early human life using an incredible variety of primary sources: 3.5-million-year-old footprints preserved by a volcano provide evidence of our ancestors' walking on two legs. Stone flakes fashioned 2 million years ago prove early hominids used tools. Bears, lions, and rhinoceroses painted in a cave 30,000 years ago reveal our ancestors' artistic side. An 8,500-year-old dog grave shows the extraordinarily long history of man's best friend. This evidence helps archaeologists decipher not just how we came to be the Homo sapiens we are today, but also what life may have been like for our earliest ancestors. The first Australians encountered freakishly gigantic beasts: kangaroos as big as houses and tortoises the size of cars. The Sahara Desert was once a fertile land, supporting herds of cattle, sheep, and goats. The Early Human World takes readers to sites around the world as archaeologists piece together the clues to our past.For grades 6-8.

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The Construction Alphabet Book Review

The Construction Alphabet Book
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The Construction Alphabet Book ReviewAfter seeing the front cover illustration of The Construction Alphabet Book on Amazon, I knew that I'd not be disappointed with the interior images, and had to purchase this book. My three year old son is obsessed with digger machines, as well as all things construction and farm, and when book after book arrived from Amazon, for myself and my older child, he asked for his turn to receive a new "digger" book. Rob Bolster's dump truck and excavator illustration caught my eye, and as we now have a huge library of construction books, I've become more choosey in the selection of new books. Exposing my children to literature and the arts is important to me; the illustrations that were created for this book are exceptional, accurate, and they capture the wonderful light and color of Edward Hooper. With so many poorly illustrated children's books, even our little guy can point out the mistakes in some illustrations, equipment and even in the text of many books, this is a refreshing addition to our collection. Even for the less sophisticated art lover, the beautifully composed pictures of construction vehicles, that are so full of wonderful color and light, will capture your child's attention as much as the subject and text. This will be a book that I will actually keep and enjoy long after the toddler obsession has moved onto something else. In the future, we will be looking for other books illustrated by Mr. Bolster and hope to meet him at a book signing!The Construction Alphabet Book Overview

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Every Bone Tells a Story: Hominin Discoveries, Deductions, and Debates Review

Every Bone Tells a Story: Hominin Discoveries, Deductions, and Debates
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Every Bone Tells a Story: Hominin Discoveries, Deductions, and Debates ReviewXXXXX
"[This book deals with] the tales of four ordinary people--four hominins who lived long before recorded history. Although not long ago we would have called these four relatives of ours "hominids," researchers recently began calling humans and their ancestors by the more precise term "hominin." Join those researchers and archaeologists, along with scores of scientists in the discovery and recovery of...four hominins. Find out how scientists have expanded on what was learned in the field during the dig and what they've been able to deduce from each set of remains in the laboratory. Take a stand on the debates those deductions ignited. These three Ds in archaeology [and generally in science as a whole]--discovery, deductions, and debates--help scientists develop a picture of how people lived in the past."
The above comes from the introduction of this clear, concise, scientifically-oriented, and extremely interesting book by Peter Robertshaw and Jill Rubalcaba. Dr. Robertshaw is an archaeologist, chair of the Department of Anthropology at California State University, and an author. Rubalcaba is a mathematician, engineer, teacher, and author.
The four hominins (meaning humans or human ancestors) alluded to in the above quotation are:
(1) Turkana Boy: the name given to the almost complete 1.6 million year old skeleton of a Homo erectus boy found in Kenya in 1984. (Homo erectus was the first hominin species to leave Africa.)
(2) Lapedo Child: name given to the skeleton of a four year old child who was buried 25,000 years ago in the Lapedo Valley in Portugal and found in 1998.
(3) Kennewick Man: the name given to the skeleton of a 9,000 year old modern human that was found in 1996 on the bank of the Columbia River in Washington state.
(4) Iceman: the well-preserved 5,300 year old modern human corpse that was found in the Alps of Italy in 1991.
This book is extremely well-written. It is not too technical and I found it very easy to follow. Any words that are difficult to understand are defined in a helpful glossary.
Some of the scientists you will meet are anthropologists, archaeologists, archaeozoologists, bioanthropologists, botanists, geoarcheologists, geneticists, linguists, paleoanthropologists, paleobotanists, and paleopathologists.
There are beautiful coloured photographs peppered throughout this book. The photograph on this book's front cover (displayed above by Amazon) is the skull of Kennewick Man.
Finally, apparently this book is classified as "juvenile literature." I don't like this term because it implies that this book is somehow dumbed down. Nothing could be further from the truth. This book, in my opinion, is for anybody interested in archaeology and anthropology in particular and science & how it works in general.
In conclusion, this is an amazing book that details the discovery, scientific deductions, and scientific debates of four hominins!!
(first published 2010: introduction; 4 chapters; conclusion; main narrative 166 pages; further reading and source notes; time line; glossary; hominins and friends; bibliography; index)

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Every Bone Tells a Story: Hominin Discoveries, Deductions, and Debates Overview

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