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Informative and endlessly fascinating, this book makes visible that which we otherwise only hear and feel as vibrations: SOUND. Authors and artists Romana Romanyshyn and Andriy Lesiv achieve a remarkable fusion of a scientific exploration of the phenomenon of sound with a philosophic reflection on its nature that will appeal to inquisitive children looking to learn more about science and how our bodies work. Stunning infographics provoke the reader to listen, learn, and think. Whether it’s hearing noise, music, speech—or silence—no one will come away from these pages without experiencing sound with new ears and a fresh understanding.
Winner (with its companion volume, Sight), Bologna Ragazzi Award, Best Nonfiction Book of the Year
“This attention-grabbing informational book starts with a bang: a rapid-fire tour of all things sound. Chock-full of whimsical infographics . . . A quiet meditation on hearing, listening, silence, communication, and understanding.” —The Horn Book Magazine
“This vibrant picture book is particularly wonderful when the text focuses on music and melody; the music of life is everywhere, from speech to nature, from trombones to gramophones, from rumbling bellies to crying babies. The absence of sound is explored as well—communicating in sign language, meditating, or simply being present in quiet moments with loved ones. . . . A great discussion-starter for elementary school children.” —School Library Journal
“A compelling foray into the many aspects of sound.” —Publishers Weekly
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
March 22, 2023 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781797204154
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781797204154
- File size: 17266 KB
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Languages
- English
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Levels
- Lexile® Measure: 820
- Text Difficulty: 3-4
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
June 1, 2020
This illustrated nonfiction primer presents a compelling foray into the many aspects of sound and how it shapes the world. In often poetic language, the married team defines sound and then differentiates between music and noise. Aided by intricate digital infographics done in muted pink, teal, and yellow, the narrative surveys topics including volume, language, and deafness, aptly accompanied by a full spread illustration of the one-handed manual alphabet used in Latinate finger spelling such as American Sign Language. Though the scientific doesn’t always cohere with moments of philosophical lyricism (“Sometimes it is hard for us to understand/ one another, and then we feel lonely”) and the scope of information makes this unwieldy as a leisure read, budding acousticians will find it a worthy resource. Ages 8–12. -
Kirkus
September 15, 2020
A visual survey of the aural world, originally published in Ukraine. Despite the ostensible topic, it's the art and page design that occupy center stage in this large-format showcase. Done by and large in montages with much use of hot and Day-Glo hues, each eye-catching scene features a mix of flat or minimally modeled images of musical instruments and other sound producers, animal or human silhouettes, and graphic representations of sonic waves, lines, bursts, or blasts. Following a hard-to-parse observation that sound "attracts our attention, we listen for it--and then, we hear it" with a diagram of a human ear, double-page spreads arranged in no obvious order tally, for example, types of sound from natural to body noises, kinds of human singing voices and recording formats, how sound is measured, music-related jobs, spoken language and sign language. Most of the captions are printed in a lightweight, low-contrast typeface only a bit darker than the backgrounds, and some seem to have been arbitrarily swept to the backmatter, replaced by asterisks. After a thunderous rainfall evoked by solid, polychrome lines of streaming onomatopoeia, the volume is switched to low with a "mute sound" icon on an empty spread that leads to closing scenes of a couple embracing, a pregnant mother, and a young child toddling out "to listen, to hear, and to perceive our world." Jazzy, loud illustrations command--and merit--attention but can't hide a higgledy-piggledy presentation. (Informational picture book. 7-10)COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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School Library Journal
November 20, 2020
Gr 2-5-This title is a silent symphony of superlative noise. The text completely and comprehensively describes the qualities, sources, and uses of sound. This vibrant picture book is particularly wonderful when the text focuses on music and melody; the music of life is everywhere, from speech to nature, from trombones to gramophones, from rumbling bellies to crying babies. The absence of sound is explored as well-communicating in sign language, meditating, or simply being present in quiet moments with loved ones. The interplay of stillness and activity is at the core of this aesthetic delight, which buzzes with neon energy and features a logical narrative flow enhanced by beautiful flourishes. This book is a deliberate visual project, as much an experiment in graphic design as a representation of its subject. VERDICT A joyful moment of reflection on our noisy, cacophonous world. A great discussion-starter for elementary school children, perhaps best experienced with the guidance of a parent or teacher.-Emilia Packard, Austin
Copyright 2020 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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The Horn Book
July 1, 2020
With a color scheme featuring bright pink, teal blue, lemon yellow, and pops of orange, this attention-grabbing informational book starts with a bang: a rapid-fire tour of all things sound. Chock-full of whimsical infographics created with digital tools and traditional print-making processes, Romanyshyn and Lesiv's artfully arranged pages introduce the anatomy of an ear; various musical instruments (even a theremin!); human singing voice types; and the sounds of a human body, a house, a city, nature, and animals. Other spreads describe decibels and hertz (the greater wax moth has the sharpest hearing), recording and playback devices, jobs that involve audio work, and different human languages, including sign language. Then, after a few images depict breakdowns in human communication, there's a surprising tonal shift. The book's tour guide -- a man toting a phonograph to collect sounds throughout the book -- takes a break: "Sometimes, we need to spend time in silence." An umbrella (handed to him by a hearing-impaired woman) shields him from a torrent of onomatopoeic words raining down in overlapping vertical lines. With a page-turn, the deluge of visual graphics subsides, and a love story unfolds, told mainly through minimalist illustrations surrounded by generous white space. It's a transcendent ending -- a quiet meditation on hearing, listening, silence, communication, and understanding. Appended is a list of sounds "worth listening to," with websites including an interactive world sound map and a Big Bang simulation.(Copyright 2020 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
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The Horn Book
November 1, 2020
With a color scheme featuring bright pink, teal blue, lemon yellow, and pops of orange, this attention-grabbing informational book starts with a bang: a rapid-fire tour of all things sound. Chock-full of whimsical infographics created with digital tools and traditional print-making processes, Romanyshyn and Lesiv's artfully arranged pages introduce the anatomy of an ear; various musical instruments (even a theremin!); human singing voice types; and the sounds of a human body, a house, a city, nature, and animals. Other spreads describe decibels and hertz (the greater wax moth has the sharpest hearing), recording and playback devices, jobs that involve audio work, and different human languages, including sign language. Then, after a few images depict breakdowns in human communication, there's a surprising tonal shift. The book's tour guide -- a man toting a phonograph to collect sounds throughout the book -- takes a break: "Sometimes, we need to spend time in silence." An umbrella (handed to him by a hearing-impaired woman) shields him from a torrent of onomatopoeic words raining down in overlapping vertical lines. With a page-turn, the deluge of visual graphics subsides, and a love story unfolds, told mainly through minimalist illustrations surrounded by generous white space. It's a transcendent ending -- a quiet meditation on hearing, listening, silence, communication, and understanding. Appended is a list of sounds "worth listening to," with websites including an interactive world sound map and a Big Bang simulation. Tanya D. Auger(Copyright 2020 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
Languages
- English
Levels
- Lexile® Measure:820
- Text Difficulty:3-4
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