- Published: 28 January 2025
- ISBN: 9798217071432
- Imprint: RH US Audio Childrens
- Format: Audio Download
- RRP: $23.00
Discovering Life's Story: Biology's Beginnings
- Published: 28 January 2025
- ISBN: 9798217071432
- Imprint: RH US Audio Childrens
- Format: Audio Download
- RRP: $23.00
In this well-researched, well-designed, and informatively written book, the fascinating story of life science as it was discovered throughout the ages is explored. . . . Written for teens, this book delivers an engaging and accessible history of life science. . . . Thoroughly engrossing and highly recommended.
—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
This fascinating first volume in the Discovering Life’s Story series is an enjoyable overview of the history of life sciences in the Western world. . . .Readers with an interest in the history of life sciences will find this engaging book to be richly rewarding.
—Booklist (starred review)
Nonfiction books for children about the natural sciences tend (naturally, we might say) to deal with particulars: the life cycle of the honeybee, say. In ‘Biology’s Beginnings,’ Joy Hakim takes a fresh approach. . . . Ms. Hakim, author of the series ‘A History of Us,’ ranges with brio and assurance across time and across the globe as she describes the push-and-pull of armies and microbes, of popes and stargazers, of philosophers and doctors and explorers in the long and erratic acquisition of knowledge. . . . [An] engrossing chronicle for readers ages 12 and older.
—The Wall Street Journal
Providing a readable and compelling overview of the history of life sciences, primarily in the Western World, this wonderfully written and exquisitely illustrated book . . . is the first volume in a planned four volume series. . . Targeted to teens between 13 and 18 years old, adults will also find much in these pages to interest them. The author skillfully uses storytelling — narrative nonfiction — to teach her readers about the life sciences and the people who made these discoveries, placing these stories into their historical context, thereby drawing her readers into the story instead of keeping them at arms-length. . . This book, and the series, would make a great gift (the holidays are coming!) for a young person who is interested in the life sciences, and would be a welcome addition to a local library or classroom.
—Forbes