"Plenty on display to satisfy the vehicle-obsessed."--Publishers Weekly
Cars, trucks, trains, planes, ships, and so many more! Almost 100 vehicles of all shapes and sizes fill the pages of this oversized book that's just right for fans of all things that go. Rotate a wheel to mix the cement in a cement mixer, slide a tab to help a firefighter climb up the fire truck ladder, and lift a flap to peek inside a jumbo jet!
• Supersized spreads with detailed illustrations
• More than 50 interactive flaps, tabs, pop-ups for hands-on learning
• Educational content reviewed by experts
If you like The Ultimate Book of Vehicles, you will also enjoy The Ultimate Book Construction Site Book!
• Great family and classroom read-aloud book
• Nonfiction books for kids
• Educational books for kindergarten and early elementary school students
"This cheerfully-illustrated, oversized book, with its sturdy flaps, popups, pull-tabs and wheels is just too much fun!"--Redbook Magazine's Mamarama Blog - (Grand Central Pub)
Anne-Sophie Baumann studied science and literature before becoming an editor and author. She lives near Paris, France.
Didier Balicevic studied at École des Arts Décoratifs in Strasbourg. He lives near Paris, where he works in publishing.
- (
Grand Central Pub)
Kirkus Reviews
Fans of trucks, trains, aircraft, and other conveyances large and small will find dozens gathered here, lined up neatly in squads according to function from "Demolition" to "Space Travel." Though most of the vehicles are easily identifiable by sight, small labels will clue in readers unfamiliar with specialized monikers like "wheel excavator" or vehicles not found in the United States, such as the colorfully decorated Pakistani bus and a motorized "pooper scooper scooter" from France. Cartoon passengers or other human figures convey a sense of size, and with occasional concessions, the floating, wheeled or winged machines are depicted at least close to relative scale on each spread. But the pleasures of poring over all the transports, earth movers and Earth leavers will pall quickly even for confirmed enthusiasts: So flat and generic are the images that many with similar purposes look like variations on the same shape. Moreover, an (rather skimpy) assortment of jointed arms, sliders, spinners and flaps that lift to provide cutaway views create at best only localized feelings of movement or visual drama. Also, the titular "ultimate" begs the lack of military or (aside from a space shuttle on the final spread) historical vehicles on view. A sizable gallery but, overall, a monotonous one. (Pop-up informational picture book. 5-7) Copyright Kirkus 2014 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
The French team of Baumann and Balicevic use flaps, wheels, pop-ups, and pivoting brads to showcase dozens of vehicles on land, at sea, in the air, and even off the planet. Cheerful, brightly colored cartoon men and women are seen hard at work throughout: an excavator's moving arm demolishes a house, a cement mixer "pours" concrete (via a wheel), a flap reveals the workings of a combine, and a firefighter's ladder ascends for a rescue. Title aside, few vehicles are nation-specific—a "pooper-scooper scooter" belongs to France, Senegalese and Indonesian fishing boats appear, and Russia's Soyuz rocket lifts off in a pop-up—but there's plenty on display to satisfy the vehicle-obsessed. Ages 4–9. (Mar.)
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