Airports

Laurence Hardisty

Book - 2026

Airports reveals the busy and complex world of an international airport to discover exactly how it works. Airports are complex and fast-moving environments filled with people traveling across the globe and workers keeping it all going--and there are so many questions about how they work: How do the bags get to the planes? Why can't people ride the luggage carousels? Do suitcases get mixed up? Do body scanners show people naked? Can snakes ride on a plane? Why can't we open the windows on the plane? And where do planes go at night? These are just a few of the questions answered in this entertaining, informative, and thoroughly satisfying book.

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Juvenile works
Published
London : Thames and Hudson 2026.
Language
English
Main Author
Laurence Hardisty (author)
Other Authors
Maxim Usik (illustrator)
Physical Description
48 pages : illustrations (colour) ; 33 cm
ISBN
9780500653876
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Making sure air travel functions smoothly is a big job--here's how it's done. Similar in concept and in graphic style to Lonely Planet'sHow Airports Work (2018), this book is aimed at a slightly older audience: twice the pages here, with no flaps to lift. Nine concise chapters that offer a tour of security checkpoints, the cockpit, the control tower, and more are framed as responses to questions--all audience-appropriate and many amusing, like "Can a Body Scanner See Me Naked?" Questions within chapters ("What if I Leave My Bag Behind?" "Can I Take Snakes on a Plane?") generate brief and reassuring answers. Tiny but clear depictions of vehicles and objects are informatively labeled, alternating aerial views with focused vignettes. Spreads crammed with details have a Richard Scarry or Where's Waldo vibe. Though the book doesn't say much about the role of flight attendants, other occupations are covered, from engineers and aircraft marshalers to pilots and air traffic controllers. Fascinating facts are interspersed: Planes don't have a reverse gear; a child and a raccoon each needed rescue from mazelike luggage carousels at airports in, respectively, Atlanta and Philadelphia; and alligators, hares, seagulls, deer, and turtles are among the animals that have had to be removed from runways. People depicted are diverse. Just the ticket for transportation mavens and anyone interested in--or apprehensive about--flying. (glossary, index)(Informational picture book. 7-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.