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Hardcover: 32 pages
ISBN: 0439455464
Ã¥ Å©±â : 35.8cm x 27.3cm
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The Washington Post
History-minded, detail-oriented kids should enjoy taxing their eyesight with this book, the latest in Stephen Biesty's Incredible Cross-Sections series. — Elizabeth Ward
Publisher's Weekly
Young readers can visit some fascinating spots in a number of visually intriguing titles. Stephen Biesty employs his meticulous drawings in an oversize volume to survey Rome: In Spectacular Cross-Section, with text by Andrew Solway. Biesty's artwork, packed with minute details, uncovers the inside workings and activities at various key locations such as the Colosseum and the Baths of Trajan, as a Roman senator and his son make their way around town. Text and illustrations combine the extraordinary and the everyday to provide a wealth of information on ancient life; explanatory captions supply historical facts and lore.
Children's Literature
Join a young boy named Titus Cotta Maximus and his father Marcus Cotta Maximus on their adventure for the day in the year 128 A.D. in Rome. In this oversized picture book, the reader is able to follow Titus from the time he wakes up in the morning, to eating breakfast, to his first visit to the Colosseum, and more all the way up to the time that he goes to bed for the night with a surprise from his dad. Each location is depicted in a two-page spread that allows one to see inside through the remarkable cross-sections and cutaway illustrations created by Biesty that include many famous historical monuments and buildings. Details are provided that describes what each person's job entails and what he/she is responsible for at each facility throughout the city. Each scene also has humorous and unusual activities taking place behind the scenes that make it fun to read, such as the actions of people during the baths and the dinner party Titus's parents are hosting. Included is a simple introduction about Titus and Marcus, brief information about each place they visit, a glossary and an index. This is an enjoyable book to help stimulate children's curiosity about history and geography. A wonderful tool to use in the classroom, especially this specific title because it makes it easy to imagine actually living during the time period. 2003, Scholastic, - Christy Oestreich
School Library Journal
How can an illustrator convey "the glory that once was Rome" to modern children when dealing with a landscape of weathered columns and wisteria? In City (Houghton, 1974), David Macaulay draws viewers in through carefully rendered close-ups of a fictitious, ancient site in the planning and design stages, brick by brick. These detailed cutaways and cross-sections deconstruct. Here, Biesty exposes the underground passages of the Colosseum, the bull being sacrificed in the Temple of Jupiter, the lack of privacy in the public restrooms, and the activity in both a wealthy politician's home and in a street scene. Life at the docks, baths, races, and Forum is interpreted by a cast of thousands and with touches of humor. The text consists of a brief narrative for each spread as it describes a festival-day routine through the movements of a senator and his son. Numerous labels, packed with information, are connected to the colorful panoramas. There is no bibliography, but the facts and re-creations are consistent with authoritative sources. Further fun awaits youngsters in the hands-on activities in Philip Steele's Step into the Roman Empire (Lorenz, 1997) and the characters and adventures in Caroline Lawrence's "Roman Mysteries" series (Roaring Brook). |
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