Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

If You Lived Here
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 37

If You Lived Here

Features detailed, bas-relief collage spreads of dwellings in other world regions and historical times to explain how different people live and have lived, from a village house in South Africa to a floating green house in the Netherlands.

Lost Cities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 40

Lost Cities

Combining world culture, history, geography, and architecture, this visually stunning look at ancient cities around the globe takes readers to such places as the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the cliff dwellings of Mesa Verde, and the mysterious sculptures of Angkor Wat. Perfect for fans of This Is How We Do It and Atlas Obscura. What would it be like if you lived a thousand years ago? To pass through the Hanging Gardens of Babylon on your way home? Or gaze at the stars from your cave dwelling in Mesa Verde? On mountaintops, deserts, and the banks of rivers, ancient cities that once thrived have become lost to time. But in their ruins, we can find clues of the past and the extraordinary lives their residents lived. All it takes is a simple question: What was life like before? Beautiful illustrations, masterfully crafted from layers of cut paper, ask readers to spend a day in the footsteps of someone from thousands of years ago.

Lost Cities
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 43

Lost Cities

Describes life in settlements from the Temple of Karnak in ancient Egypt, Herculaneum, and Great Zimbabwe to Fatepur Sikri in India and Jamestown, Virginia, and explains how they became lost cities, how they were found, and what is unusual about them.

Bridges are to Cross
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 32

Bridges are to Cross

Everyone knows bridges are to cross -- to get to the other side. From a simple log to woven webs of steel, bridges reflect our values, our lifestyles. Feast your eyes on these bridges from around the world, all painstakingly created with intricately cut paper, and you will come to realize that crossing is only one reason for having a bridge.

Sacred Places
  • Language: en

Sacred Places

Describes various types of space which are sacred to different religions, including churches, mosques, synagogues, temples, and other shrines.

What Do Wheels Do All Day?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 36

What Do Wheels Do All Day?

The weels push, race, stroll, fly, whiz, and spin all day long.

What's Inside?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 44

What's Inside?

As it takes us on a tour of some of the most unique and beautiful structures, this book shows how the purpose of each structure dictated its design, or location. Here are soaring glass skyscrapers (for working people) and a humble stone barn (for working animals); a sealed tomb hewn out of a limestone hillside (for buried reasure) and a majestic marble building, honoring a goddess. As it reveals what lies inside each structure, this book gives insight into the people who designed these buildings -- into their hopes, their lives, and their concepts of beauty. Included -- for budding engineers and architects -- are statistics such as the year built, square footage, materials used, height, and ...

General Store
  • Language: en

General Store

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1995
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

A girl imagines the general store she will own someday and all the things for sale in it, from bolts of calico to bunches of bananas.

Now You See Them, Now You Don't
  • Language: en

Now You See Them, Now You Don't

Find me if you can. . . for if you don’t, I’ll be here tomorrow . . . you won’t. Animals and insects use camouflage to hide from hunters or to ambush prey. Stealth is a very useful technique when it comes to survival. In this fun and informative collection of poems, we meet animals such as the polar bear and the octopus; the ghost crab and the copperhead snake; and many more that use camouflage to hunt or to hide. Giles Laroche’s intricate cut-paper illustrations are beautiful and life-like. Readers will have to look carefully or run the risk of a hunter sneaking up on them. Back matter offers additional information about each of the nineteen animals.

Who Sees the Lighthouse?
  • Language: en

Who Sees the Lighthouse?

In this cumulative rhyme, lighthouses from around the United States are observed by one sailor, two pilots, three gulls, and more.