**SAINSBURY'S CHILDREN'S BOOK AWARD 2018 WINNER - LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT CATEGORY**
How many people could fit on a blue whale’s tongue? Is a hovercraft faster than a tank? And what grows quicker – toenails or fingernails?
Discover the answer to these questions and so much more in The Book of Comparisons. Brimming with incredible facts to wow your family and friends with, this book will help you to understand extraordinary things in our world, by comparing them with other things!
Through awesome comparisons, you’ll learn about:
- The strongest animals
- The fastest vehicles
- The biggest poopers in the world
- The most extreme journeys ever taken
- The awesome power of natural forces
Filled with amazingly
detailed illustrations and fascinating
nuggets of information to ‘wow’ family and friends with, this
fact-packed book is sure to keep the whole family entertained.
Absorbing, entertaining, and surprising, once you’ve learned how comparisons can work,
you’ll never look at the world in the same way again!
Did you know that you can fit two football teams on the tongue of a blue whale? Did you know that the Samoan moss spider is as small as a grain of salt? Find out about these - and lots, lots more amazing information - in The Book of Comparisons. Perfect for fact fans! - The Week Junior This lovely book, with great illustrations by Paul Boston, is packed full of the sort of facts children love. The large pages are stuffed with extraordinary details, comparing everything from animals, to space to machines. Aimed at 7+, this seems like a book that could last for years, as it is so full of interesting little tit bits. -
Reading Zone The Book of Comparisons is a crazy good fact nugget tomb! -
WRD Magazine A lavishly illustrated, 90-page compendium of the sort of jaw-dropping statistics which children love to outdo each other. - Daily Telegraph
The Book of Comparisons is so compelling. Gifford finds some brilliant stats to compare and in the process, simplifies science.” - How it Works magazine
Over forty illustrated topics compare, contrast and analyse the relative scale of many of the most amazing aspects of the natural and human world, often with the awe-inspiring spectacle only apparent from an approach of comparison. Lively illustrations from Paul Boston.
4* 'now I have read Clive Gifford's absorbing Book of Comparisons, and my brain has become a mine of astonishing facts...lavishly illustrated... the sort of jaw-dropping statistics with which children love to outdo each other'