
Though the title is "The Boy Who Asks a Gazillion Whys", the main focus discussed in this book was about gravitation. Which was completely fine but I just thought the book would answer some "whys" kids frequently asked, especially STEM related.
The analogy of gravity giving us hug was surely excellent. My son understood it better than any explanations he had heard about gravity before.
However, to be frankly honest, we (my son and I) were not the fans of the illustrations. They were more like animation and kinda overwhelming for our eyes.
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"Not every question has an answer yet. That's why we need curious minds like yours."
---
This book smoothly encourages the (young) readers to keep asking questions, no matter how silly they may sound. This point was also what I adored the most from this book. I want my son to keep his curiosity and freely ask questions like the boy(s) in here.
Thank you to Barbara Pinke and NetGalley for the ARC.
Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.
Though the title is "The Boy Who Asks a Gazillion Whys", the main focus discussed in this book was about gravitation. Which was completely fine but I just thought the book would answer some "whys" kids frequently asked, especially STEM related.
The analogy of gravity giving us hug was surely excellent. My son understood it better than any explanations he had heard about gravity before.
However, to be frankly honest, we (my son and I) were not the fans of the illustrations. They were more like animation and kinda overwhelming for our eyes.
---
"Not every question has an answer yet. That's why we need curious minds like yours."
---
This book smoothly encourages the (young) readers to keep asking questions, no matter how silly they may sound. This point was also what I adored the most from this book. I want my son to keep his curiosity and freely ask questions like the boy(s) in here.
Thank you to Barbara Pinke and NetGalley for the ARC.
Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.