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Toilet: How It Works - by David Macaulay & Sheila Keenan (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- Celebrated author-illustrator and master explainer David Macaulay brings his unique voice and style to high-interest nonfiction books for newly independent readers.
- 6-9 Years
- 10.2" x 6.8" Paperback
- 32 Pages
- Juvenile Nonfiction, Technology
- Series Name: How It Works
Description
About the Book
"Follows a tour of the bathroom and the sewer system, from the family toilets to municipal water treatment plants."--Provided by publisher.Book Synopsis
Celebrated author-illustrator and master explainer David Macaulay brings his unique voice and style to high-interest nonfiction books for newly independent readers.
Everyone knows what a toilet is for, right? But what exactly happens after you flush? Where does our waste go, and how is it made safe? With his unique blend of informative text and illustration, David Macaulay takes readers on a tour of the bathroom and the sewer system, from the familiar family toilet to the mysterious municipal water treatment plant.
A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of 2013
Review Quotes
"In his signature squiggly style, Macaulay pulls back the curtain to show just how it all goes down(so to speak)." --Booklist
"A perfect blend of humor and clarity - in text and in artwork - explains the anatomy of human waste, the mechanics of a flush toilet and the subsequent treatment of waste in septic and sewer systems." --Kirkus Reviews, starred review "A unique nonfiction offering that deals with human waste in a way that most other books have not. . .A boon to those looking to beef up informational offerings to meet Common Core standards." --School Library Journal, starred review "Macaulay reminds readers that while such language is precise, it can also be lively." --The Horn BookAbout the Author
David Macaulay received his bachelor of architecture degree from Rhode Island School of Design. In January 1973, Macaulay went to France to work on the first of his twenty-five books, Cathedral. He then constructed a colonial Roman town (City, 1974), erected monuments to the Pharaohs (Pyramid, 1975), dissected the maze of subterranean systems below and essential to every major city (Underground, 1976), built a medieval fortress (Castle, 1977), and dismantled the Empire State Building (Unbuilding, 1980). Macaulay is perhaps best known for The Way Things Work (1988). It was followed by Black and White (1990) for which he won the 1991 Caldecott Medal. A revised edition of The Way Things Work was published in 1998 followed by Building Big, Mosque, and most recently, The Way We Work (2008).