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Space

A Visual Encyclopedia

by DK
ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Are you ready for an intergalactic adventure?

This space encyclopedia for children presents the entire Universe in one stunning book.

Let the countdown begin as you launch into space to view the many wonders of the Solar System. Ride a rocket like an astronaut, take your first steps on the Moon, feel the rocky red surface of Mars, and run rings around Saturn. Travel further into deepest, darkest space and be dazzled by the biggest and brightest stars millions of light years away.

Packed with amazing images from NASA missions, as well as exclusive interviews and incredible facts, you'll experience and understand the Universe as never before.

Calling all space cadets and aspiring astronauts, this one is for you!

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  • Reviews

    • School Library Journal

      December 1, 2010

      Gr 4-6-An eye-catching, if not exemplary, alternative for older single-volume compendia on the extraterrestrial universe such as David A. Aguilar's Planets, Stars, and Galaxies (National Geographic, 2007). Space is a substantial outing that wedges hundreds of digestible blocks of text in at least three different type sizes and levels of detail on or around a huge array of space photos and art. Presented largely in the customary single-topic spreads, coverage is very broad, ranging from the practice of astronomy and the history of our ventures into space to the components of the solar system and of the cosmos at large. Earth, the Moon, and the Sun come in for full sections of their own, topics of recent interest such as "Space Tourism" and "Space Debris" earn spreads, and the information is current enough to include a reference to the mid-2009 installation of a new camera on the Hubble Space Telescope. The pictures are total eye candy, sharply reproduced on black backgrounds, varying in size from a few inches square to dramatic full spreads, and offering everything from sky maps and deep-space fields millions of light years across to cutaway views of spacecraft and close-ups of astronaut food. Still, that level of visual appeal is now common in nonfiction, the amount of material here that is new or not easily available elsewhere is relatively small, and the lack of any resource lists make this more suitable for casual enquiry and browsing than systematic study.-John Peters, formerly at New York Public Library

      Copyright 2010 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • PDF ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:1130
  • Text Difficulty:8-9

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