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Editorials
School Library Journal
Gr 4-6-As assignment fare goes, these biographies are certainly serviceable, combining generous arrays of both period and modern illustrations with well-organized accounts of their subjects' lives, intertwined with lucid explanations of their achievements and importance, all backed up by annotated lists of relevant books and Web sites. With refreshing, if simplistic, hyperbole (Aristotle "was wrong about almost everything in physics"), Goldsmith styles Galileo as the "first true scientist," a brilliant, charming, argumentative sort with a talent for making powerful friends and enemies, and whose imagination remained fertile throughout his long life. In contrast, Mason takes a calmer tone, portraying Edison as an outstanding businessman/ inventor whose creative period was largely over after the turn of the century. The famed "But it does move!" anecdote is strangely absent from Galileo, and of Edison's inventions only the phonograph and his improvements to the telephone are described in any detail. Yet, both authors do take peeks beyond their subjects' public lives, at Galileo's correspondence with his daughter Virginia, for instance, and at Edison's rocky relationship with Tom, Jr., and provide persuasive arguments for why these two men are worth studying. All in all, except to replace titles that have gone out of print, there is no clear reason to prefer these picture biographies over any of the several others currently available.-John Peters, New York Public Library Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.Book Details
Published
August 1, 2001
Publisher
Heinemann Library
Pages
48
Format
Library Binding
ISBN
9780739844144