Book Description:
<ul> <li>Do sleeping volcanoes snore? (see page 12)</li><li>Is the Dead Sea dead? (see page 21)</li><li>How icy is Iceland? (see page 78)</li></ul>Join best selling author Kenneth C. Davis on an entertaining trek across the globe as he answers some big questions about the world in the amusing style that has won millions of readers.</p>With fascinating anecdotes about the world's most unusual places and notable quotes from world travelers throughout history, Davis leads you to the longest river, coldest desert, tallest waterfall, most powerful volcanic eruption, and much more. Humorous illustrations and amazing stories make the 'boring' facts of geography come to life as you read about Marco Polo's adventures in China and discover that people in Latin America speak Spanish and Portuguese not Latin at all!</p>Kenneth C. Davis brings the verve of his popular best seller <i>Don't Know Much About Geography </i> to a new audience. He makes it fun to learn more about this incredible planet we call home.</p> /Content /EditorialReview EditorialReview Source Amazon.com Review /Source Content How's this for a novel concept: geography is not just about naming a country's major exports, memorizing the names of the continents, or finding the Sahara Desert on a map. According to Kenneth C. Davis, author of the bestselling <I>Don't Know Much About History</I>, as well as the fun new Don't Know Much About series for kids, geography is about 'knowing where we are, how we got there, and where we might be going.' In <I>Don't Know Much About Planet Earth</I>, readers become explorers, discovering remarkable, far off places, meeting fascinating people, and finding answers to questions they might not have known they even had. Following several chapters about Earth, deserts, earthquakes, maps, tropical rainforests, etc., come chapters on each of the seven continents. Packed chock full of fascinating facts, every page is sure to make readers begin to think more deeply about the world around them. A lively question and answer format explains why maps of the world will always, always be wrong. Find out if there is enough food to feed the world, why Earth looks mostly blue from outer space, and why Australia is home to such unusual animals. Illustrator Tom Bloom's cartoon style drawings are an entertaining accompaniment to Davis' upbeat, up to date text. <p> Don't know much about anything? You will soon. Other titles in this amusing and enlightening series for kids include <I>Don't Know Much About the 50 States</I>, <I>Don't Know Much About Space</I>, and <I>Don't Know Much About the Solar System</I>. (Ages 9 to 12) <I> Emilie Coulter</I>
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