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Up! Up! Up! Skyscraper

Anastasia Suen Ryan O'Rourke

$34.99

Hardback

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English
Charlesbridge Publishing,U.S.
17 July 2017
Young construction enthusiasts get a front-row seat to the construction site as a skysraper grows tall and readers learn how buildings are made.

Snappy rhymes invite young readers to watch workers dig, pour, pound, and bolt a skyscraper into existence. Simple yet satisfying sidebars provide further information about each step in the construction process. Perfect for preschoolers and all those who dig diggers.

Quirky, colorful art enhance the appeal of a construction site with all the equipment and sounds of building.
By:  
Illustrated by:   Ryan O'Rourke
Imprint:   Charlesbridge Publishing,U.S.
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 287mm,  Width: 226mm,  Spine: 10mm
Weight:   471g
ISBN:   9781580897105
ISBN 10:   158089710X
Pages:   32
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 3 to 7 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Anastasia Suen is the author of more than 215 books, many of which explore science and technology for young readers. Anastasia is also a LibrarySparks and Booklist columnist and blogger, a children's literature consultant, a freelance editor, and a teacher. For many years Ryan O'Rourke's illustrations have appeared in galleries, newspapers, and magazines, including a weekly illustration for the Boston Globe Sunday Magazine. One Big Rain marks Ryan's foray into children's picture books. He makes his home in Connecticut.

Reviews for Up! Up! Up! Skyscraper

Lucky kids don hard hats to witness the construction behind the fence.A supervisor explains the building process step by step, in both verse and longer paragraphs. First, a drilling rig digs a long thin trench around the entire site. Bars of steel go into the trench to form the bones of the new skyscraper. Next comes the concrete. Pour, pour, pour! / Wet concrete / A line of mixers / Along the street, reads the verse. In smaller type, the text explains, It takes a lot of concrete to fill a trench. After one mixer empties out, the next one moves up so we can keep pouring. More digging clears the earth inside. Suen carefully uses appropriate terminology in the prose portions. Under the dirt that remains is solid rock called bedrock. Long concrete piles are pounded into this bedrock to steady the building. The foundation consists of concrete poured over a rebar frame. Spread by spread, the building goes up as the multiracial crew works and multiracial kids look on. Finally, the kids stand on the street staring up at the new skyscraper, and the last page of the book unfolds up to reveal it. Suen's rhymes will feel a little babyish to all but the youngest construction aficionados. Her plain text works better with O'Rourke's Adobe Photoshop illustrations, multiple important components of each neatly labeled. Crisply informative.--Kirkus Reviews


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