Available Formats
Science Comics: Cars: Engines That Move You
By (Author) Dan Zettwoch
Roaring Brook Press
First Second
28th May 2019
United States
Children
Non Fiction
629.2
Hardback
128
Width 155mm, Height 223mm, Spine 13mm
378g
Every volume of Science Comics offers a complete introduction to a particular topic-dinosaurs, coral reefs, the solar system, volcanoes, bats, flying machines, and more. These gorgeously illustrated graphic novels offer wildly entertaining views of their subjects. Whether you're a fourth grader doing a natural science unit at school or a thirty-year-old with a secret passion for airplanes, these books are for you! In this volume, you'll learn where cars came from and how they work. When you pop the hood, what are you looking at How does gasoline-or electric batteries or even steam-make a car move Rev up your motor and take look at the combustible history of the automobile and its explosive effects on our modern lives.
Praise for the Science Comics series:
This series--written by a handful of authors--seems determined to offer a useful introduction to anything a curious grade-school student might wonder about. The insight behind these books is a powerful one. So much information about the world around us is actually better conveyed visually, through charts, illustrations, and sequential panels, than purely using words. --New York Times
Like having a Time Life Science Library in comic books. Which is awesome! --Popular Science
Praise for Science Comics: Cars:
The winding scenery that gives this journey warmth is historical anecdotes...Zettwoch imbues his visually dense pages with personality and flow befitting his subject. --Booklist
This breezy spin through the past, present, and (near) future of cars and related vehicles speeds down a well-traveled road, but its graphic format will give it particular appeal to readers years away from learner's permits. --School Library Journal
Dan Zettwoch makes slice-of-life comics, goofball illustrations, how-to diagrams, and folksy art in his house in St. Louis. His books include Bidseye Bristoe, Amazing Facts and Beyond, and lots of self-published mini-comics. At the request of his two-year-old son Archie, he just finished a massive neon green and silver screenprint showing the mechanical and historical underpinnings of the monster truck. He always has ink all over himself. Science Comics: Cars is his first book with First Second. danzettwoch.com