Selected Product: | The New Way Things Work Hardcover Edition: 1 Author: David Macaulay Publisher: Houghton Mifflin/Walter Lorraine Books Release Date: 1998-10-26 Reading Level: Young Adult ISBN-10: 0395938473 ISBN-13: 9780395938478 List Price: $35.00 Average Customer Rating: | | The Way We Work ISBN-10: 0618233784 ISBN-13: 9780618233786 List Price:$35.00 Castle ISBN-10: 0395329205 ISBN-13: 9780395329207 List Price:$9.95 Underground ISBN-10: 0395340659 ISBN-13: 9780395340653 List Price:$9.95 The Way Science Works ISBN-10: 0789485621 ISBN-13: 9780789485625 List Price:$24.99 The Way Science Works ISBN-10: 0789485621 ISBN-13: 0635517085624 List Price:$24.99 Castle ISBN-10: 0395329205 ISBN-13: 0046442329200 List Price:$9.95 Underground ISBN-10: 0395340659 ISBN-13: 0046442340656 List Price:$9.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The New Way Things Work by David Macaulay (ISBN-10: 0395938473, ISBN-13: 9780395938478). At this time we have not yet written a review for The New Way Things Work by David Macaulay (ISBN-10: 0395938473, ISBN-13: 9780395938478). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com The information age is upon us, baffling us with thousands of complicated state-of-the-art technologies. To help make sense of the computer age, David Macaulay brings us The New Way Things Work. This completely updated and expanded edition describes twelve new machines and includes more than seventy new pages detailing the latest innovations. With an entirely new section that guides us through the complicated world of digital machinery, where masses of electronic information can be squeezed onto a single tiny microchip, this revised edition embraces all of the newest developments, from cars to watches. Each scientific principle is brilliantly explained--with the help of a charming, if rather slow-witted, woolly mammoth. Printing too dark in some places | Customer Rating: | | I ordered 3 of these for gifts. This is something I think every child should have (and I like it too). I was disappointed when I received them though. In some places the printing was so dark you couldn't read the text, or make out the well done art. I just wasn't willing to pay full price for what I felt was not a top quality production. Returning to Amazon was easy. I also tried contacting the publisher to see if they had better copies, but I never received a reply from them. | Mammoth Lovers Unite!!! | Customer Rating: | I originally got this book back in 1988 when I was a young lad. That copy has served me well throughout high school, an college engineering curriculum, and my current employment. Just recently, my 10 year old "found" my copy and has been glued to it for weeks... and he'll be getting a copy for the holidays.
I love the wit of the author as he pushes the Woolly Mammoths through science and physics concepts. While I'm sure many factors contributed to the extinction of the mammoth, Macaulay helps provide an "alternate" analysis to the disappearance - curiosity.
A must-have for future engineers, physicists, and scientists... | This is too cool | Customer Rating: | | You CAN let your kids read it TOO! I'm an engineer and this book is full of stuff I now use at work - really. My eight year old doesn't have the attention span to get through a section, YET. | Husband loves it | Customer Rating: | | My husband loves to learn about how things work. The title of the book told me this was just the book for him. | Ingenuity. Imagination. Depictions. Diagrams. | Customer Rating: | Put these four things together--ingenuity, imagination, depictions, diagrams-- and you have a double ID toward understanding how things work. David Macaulay and Neil Ardley put together a magnificent volume for children and children at heart containing a way of understanding the laws of physics and mechanics.
The first illustration even shows God busy creating the rotation of the earth. Then they go to the earth where wooly mammoths lived and pick up one to take us through the history of mechanics, machines, and the like. Dozens of movements in five sections: waves, electricity, automation, digital domain, and machines show us just how easy these things are to understand done in drawerings.
Just as in child's play, there is no seeming order to the arrangement of items in the book. For example here are a few pages next to each other: vacuum cleaners, aqualungs or oxygen tanks, the toilet tank, the water meter, dishwasher, spray nozzle, fire extinguisher. Are you seeing an order? Yes, so am I.
Flipping over a hundred pages, I find the jet engine, rocket engines, nuclear power, nuclear weapons, fallout, nuclear reactor. OK, a definite pattern. Another hundred pages show these topics: movie camera, movie projector, printing, paper making, printing plate, printing press, bookbinding. More discernible order and logical arrangement.
One last check: scanner, bits and bytes, flash memory, magnetic storage, microchip, processor, software. We know where we are and recognize the order--a computer and its parts.
This reviewer has a suggestion for the reader. Once you have this book in hand, take it home, take it out every night and read a comfortable number of pages. If you have a child, read one page, discuss it, put this one away and take out a night-night book to read. If this is just your book, read several pages. By the time you have finished the book, you will have added dozens of operating systems to the computer banks in your own brain, making your child and/or yourself an expert in the way things work. |
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