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L**X
he loved it!
I bought this book for my grandson, he loved it!
T**R
Five Stars
Great book both for kids and adults.
P**M
Science Made Fun
One of the things that I find myself really jealous about is how my kids have access to so much fun science. When I was a wee child the only accessible science we had was Science Weekly, a thin elementary school level magazine where the latest space craft and jets were described. It was brief but wonderful and I loved it.Now of course there is so much more. Cool shows like HOW IT'S MADE, COSMOS, DIRTY JOBS, BILL NYE, MYTHBUSTERS and the DIRTMEISTER. Not just science and math here but edu-tainment.What I love about edu-tainment is how easy it makes it for kids to absorb information. In videos and in print kid-friendly formats lead to kids absorbing information and wanting to know more. This is why I'm a fan of the DIRTMEISTER//National Geographic Kids combine. You get science that's presented in easy to understand and digest nuggets. And the DIRTMEISTER's NITTY GRITTY PLANET EARTH is very kid-friendly.In this book readers will flip their way through all kids of earthly questions and answers. They'll find out about Earthquakes, Minerals, Volcanoes, Fossils and more. The format is colorful and like a sophisticated comic book with plenty of action and information. Even the paper is pleasant to touch with it's heavy slick feel.I LOVED:: the bright colorful format and the titles of the different sections. The section on carbon dating, for example, is called 'The Clocks in the Rocks'. It's a cleverness kids and adults can appreciate.OTHER CONDENSED NOTES--I don't having reading numbers on this book yet. They just aren't out.--If your reader is young you might have to sit down with them for a moment and go over the format. In places the 'dialog' and flow of the story is split on the same pages. For example, in Chapter 3 in the top half of the pages show the DirtMeister is talking to his buddy, Digger, and they are setting up probes along a fault line. The bottom half of the pages has a dialog between the Meister and a girl from Japan that wants to find out what causes earthquakes. The backgrounds of the two storylines are different so that you don't get confused, but a new reader might need to be shown this.--the science comes in levels. To stick with our Earthquake example, kids can keep to the simple stuff, or they can learn about S-waves and P-waves. There's even an experiment to use to help lock-down understand of the differences.--Chapter 3 is 12 pages long.RECOMMEND. This would be a good book for the home or classroom shelves. Libraries, of course. (review copy)
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