How Do Satellites Stay in Space?: A Book about How Satellites Work

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Product Details
Price
$9.99  $9.29
Publisher
Flowerpot Press
Publish Date
Pages
32
Dimensions
9.03 X 9.03 X 0.43 inches | 0.82 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9781486722778

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About the Author

Jessica Taylor enjoys discovering new things, that's why she became a scientist. She grew up outside of Tampa, FL, the lightning capital of the world. Watching storms inspired her to study meteorology. She loves learning so much she also got degrees in finance and education. Now she lives in Virginia with her husband and two daughters. The family watches and observes the clouds together. Jessica hopes her first children's book inspires young scientists to observe and ask questions about how technology helps us better understand our world.

Srimalie Bassani lives and works in Mantova, Italy. Her mother has always encouraged her artistic expression, and she is the inspiration for her passion. Her work is full of surprises. She always tries to diversify her style based on every story she illustrates. It's almost impossible to remove her from her writing desk, where she keeps a stack of books and teacups of many colors.

Reviews

For young readers with lots of questions about satellites, this book has many of the answers. Taylor responds to an imaginary reader with thorough replies scaled to inform but not overwhelm or discourage. Bassani's illustrations are styled like a notebook and paper-collage pages. Detailed and fun, the artwork creates playful visuals to the questions Taylor poses. In response to "How do scientists fix satellites? Do they send space handy workers?" Bassani provides a literal interpretation of workers floating in space, fixing a satellite. The text explains why that scenario wouldn't work and how scientists do actually service satellites. This sort of engagement between the text and the artwork might encourage young readers to ask even more questions--even questions that seem silly! VERDICT In very few pages, author and illustrator collaborate to encourage children to pursue answers, no matter how trivial, and have fun while doing it. For larger collections.

--School Library Journal

A fun, slightly zany take on science topics that expands beyond the standard content.

--Booklist

Each page has catchy and colorful illustrations that help the reader to make meaning of many concepts.

--Youth Services Book Review

"A friendly, enlightening text for future scientists or anyone curious about space."

--Kirkus Reviews