Every day, chem[i]stry

Julia Sooy

Book - 2021

"Science is all around us in our daily lives. Specifically, chemistry! When your bread toasts, when your shampoo foams, when the playground slide rusts--those are all chemical reactions. In this book, a mother and daughter experience all these things and more as they go about their day, from when they wake up, to when they go to bed."--Jacket flap.

Saved in:

Children's Room Show me where

jE/Sooy
2 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Sooy Checked In
Children's Room jE/Sooy Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Creative nonfiction
Picture books
Published
New York : Feiwel and Friends 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Julia Sooy (author)
Other Authors
Bonnie Pang (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
On title page "[i]" appears as an illustration in the form of a test tube.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781250768698
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This is a cheerful introduction to the ubiquity of chemistry. Precise language mirrored by colorful illustrations depicts concepts such as physical and chemical changes; vocabulary such as respiration, digestion, and reaction; and much more. Readers will learn how, at every moment of the day, some kind of chemistry is at work: when we cook, play, eat, wash, or even when we love. The book has an easy narrative style that lends a storylike feeling, and the illustrations of a child and her family going about their day provide a warm welcome into the world of science--a world that is science. Back matter adds a more academic explanation of chemical changes and how to spot them in the process of baking bread, which may lead to cooking experiments in the kitchen. Early-elementary teachers will appreciate this as a read-aloud, with the potential for lots of discussion. Can be paired thematically with Elin Kelsey's You Are Stardust (2012) and Wild Ideas: Let Nature Inspire Your Thinking (2015).

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Chemistry isn't something that requires test tubes and goggles, as a parent and child discover in these pages--instead, "science is all around us." Sooy's (Our World Is Relative) setup explanation may confuse young readers and even some adults ("Substances become something new--not just by cutting or freezing or physical change, but by changing what they are, their chemical composition"), but easy-to-grasp examples soon take over as the white-skinned family moves through their day. Every- thing they encounter involves chemistry: the breakfast toast, the rust on a slide, the brown coloration on an apple, the shampoo that "foams, lifting away sweat and dirt," the pizza dough rising, even breathing itself. Pang (MVP: Most Valuable Puppy) keeps the bright-eyed, engaged protagonists and their actions front and center, in cheery color and clean digital lines that have the cozy familiarity of TV animation. The slight story doesn't offer specifics about how the listed reactions take place, but back matter offers some help, in the form of questions "to help determine if a chemical reaction has occurred" and a real-life example of chemical and physical change: bread baking. Ages 4--8. (June)■

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved