Kids Books - Science

Who Is Bill Gates?

Who Is Bill Gates?

By Patricia Brennan Demuth

Want to learn how Bill Gates started out. This book tells you a time line on the guy who created the future. How did he get the idea of making the computer? How did he run his company? than this is the perfect book for you.

Who Is Jane Goodall?

Who Is Jane Goodall?

By Roberta Edwards

Ever since Jane goodall had a chimpanzee stuffed animal when she was young she wanted to spend her life with chimpanzees . But it was hard to make that dream come true. After awhile of working her friend invites her to her new home in Africa which is exactly where she wants to go. Only thing is it's expensive . So she works and works. You'll have to read the book to find out what happens next. I love this book so much! I recommend to all ages and I rate this book 5/5 stars . Thank you for this review! 😁 - Pizzagirl7 😁

Who Was Thomas Alva Edison?

Who Was Thomas Alva Edison?

By Margaret Frith

Thomas always had been interested in things. When he was young he saw a bird eat a worm and then fly away so he though if he did the same thing he could fly!😂 🐦! Thomas worked very hard . Staying up for a long time working on projects that would one day change the world 🌎! I recommend this book to all ages and I rate this book 3/5 stars I thought it was kinda good. (Thats just my opinion!)! - Pizzagirl7 💋

Who Was Eleanor Roosevelt

Who Was Eleanor Roosevelt

By Gare Thompson

Lol

This is the best biography book I read I did this book for a book report and its about Eleanor was a girl and her mom didn't care about her because she didn't have the looks like her mom only her dad cared about her and her dad a had a problem with drinking and he went to a other countries to get help but then her mother had a baby later later passes he's mother is sick and dies and then her dad and she goes to college and she meets her cousin and they fell in love and got married and they studied hard then his husband ran for president and his uncle teddy rosavelt came too but find out when you read it

Who Was Mark Twain?

Who Was Mark Twain?

By April Jones Prince

I rate this book a 3 star because this book talks about how Mark Twain became famous. I made a connection to Mark Twain because he always liked being alone near the Mississippi River and I like being alone for most of my time. Best known as the author of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain, not unlike his protagonist, Huck, has a restless spirit. He found adventure prospecting for silver in Nevada, navigating steamboats down the Mississippi, and making people laugh around the world. There is my summary of this book and my review!

Who Was Neil Armstrong?

Who Was Neil Armstrong?

By Roberta Edwards

Neil had always been into airplanes . He loved them his whole life. When Neil got to an adult (young adult ) he wanted to go to college to lessen about planes and how they worked. Half way through college he got called into the U.S. Navy . But he did get to fly planes there. After the Navy he went back to college and felt he was older and more mature now . You'll have to read the book to find out what happens next!I recommend this book to all ages and I rate this book 3/5 stars thank you for reading my review!-Pizzagirl7💋

This Book Is Not Good For You (The Secret Series)

This Book Is Not Good For You (The Secret Series)

By Pseudonymous Bosch

This book is full of adventure, happiness, and humor. Cass and Max-Earnest find this coca plantation inside a zoo. And it is controlled by the Midnight Sun! If you wan't to know what happens next, read the book. It is awesome!!!!

Tuck Everlasting

Tuck Everlasting

By RINEHART AND WINSTON HOLT

Natalie Babbitt, the author of Tuck Everlasting, sweeps readers along on the thought-stirring journey of Winnie Foster when she meets the eternally unaging Tuck family. The well-crafted characters included eleven-year-old Winnie Foster, a young girl who yearns to escape the confines of her yard and to be free of proper, beautiful clothing--and finally gets her wish. The Tuck family includes Mae Tuck, the caring, mentally old mother of the family, Angus Tuck, the weary father who wishes the Tucks could someday age and die to allow them back into the “wheel of life”, Miles, the oldest of two brothers whose wife left him under the belief he had sold his soul to the devil to say young, and Jesse, the eternally seventeen-year-old boy. There is also the eternally living horse, the yellow-suited man, and the somewhat dim constable. The book is set in the fictional town of Treegap, where there is a wood. In the middle of the wood, there is a pleasant touch-me-not cabin, in which the young Winnie foster lives with her parents and grandmother. The young girl escapes into the wood one day, and finds a spring, as which a boy, Jesse, is resting. When she sees the boy, she asks to drink from the spring, being dreadfully thirsty, but Jesse panically tries to stop her, and eventually Mae and Miles arrive, halting Winnie from drinking the water which would bless--or curse--her with eternal life. What follows is a story that can change how readers think forever. Personally, I admire Natalie's writing style and admire her ability to tell the story of the Tucks so creatively. She made me think a lot about what it might be like to live forever--is it really a good thing to never grow old? She also makes it easy to envision the wood and treegap in my mind’s eye; the amber and emerald light filtering through green leaves to the forest floor, the eternal ash tree, the animals, and the way she explains how things connect together. Samples of her writing style: “His tall body moved continuously; a foot tapped, a shoulder twitched. And it moved in angles, rather jerkily. But at the same time he had a kind of grace, like a well-handled marionette. Indeed, he seemed almost to hang suspended there in the twilight. But Winnie, though she was half charmed, was suddenly reminded of the stiff black ribbons they had hung on the door of the cottage for her grandfather's funeral.” “Into it all came Winnie, eyes wide, and very much amazed. It was a whole new idea to her that people could live in such disarray, but at the same time she was charmed. It was… comfortable. Climbing behind Mae up the stairs to see the loft, she thought to herself: ‘Maybe it's because they think they have forever to clean it up.’ And this was followed by another thought, far more revolutionary: ‘Maybe they just don't care!’” “There was a clearing directly in front of her, at the center of which an enormous tree thrust up, its thick roots rumpling the ground ten feet around in every direction. Sitting relaxed with his back against the trunk was a boy, almost a man. And he seemed so glorious to Winnie that she lost her heart at once.” “She rocked, gazing out at the twilight, and the soothing feeling came reliably into her bones. That feeling—it tied her to them, to her mother, her father, her grandmother, with strong threads too ancient and precious to be broken. But there were new threads now, tugging and insistent, which tied her just as firmly to the Tucks.” This book, despite being slightly short, really makes you think, and I love it--I plan on re-reading it until my eyes burn out. It makes the reader think and consider what it would be like to live forever, and it really makes you second-guess your first thoughts of immortality. It’s most certainly a must-read for anyone! -Dakota Corr.

You Have to Stop This (The Secret Series)

You Have to Stop This (The Secret Series)

By Pseudonymous Bosch

I totally LOVE the secret series, it's super funny but it's mysterious too! Then there's tons of cool, magical things and creatures! The book is about two boys, Yo-Yoji, Max-Ernest (the boy with 2 names) and one girl, Cassandra, and on a trip to a museum, Cassandra accidentally breaks a finger off a mummy, and this led them to an adventure, and in the end of the book, they found out The Secret, a secret that was hunted down for centuries.

Champion

Champion

By Marie Lu

OH MY GOODNESS. I knew the third, often regarded as final, book in the Legend series was bound to cause some heartbreak, but I was absolutely crushed—in the best way possible—by the ending. Throughout the novel, millions of emotions kept building up: Day and June's sadness from being apart, their desperation and need to be with each other, but also the hesitance, anger, and anguish festering between them. Their relationship is developed in such a way I have never seen before. Amidst their conflicting emotions, a war between the Republic and the Colonies is in full swing, with Day and June at the heart of it. A new plague variant is spreading across the Colonies from the Republic, but the Republic does not have a cure—yet. By the end of this thrilling novel, the ball drops, and the war is resolved while a major crisis changes the trajectory of Day and June's relationship forever. So, so good. Five stars, always.

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