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Filtered By:. Grid List. Order By: Top Matches. In stock online. Available in stores. An up-to-date, clear and interesting introduction to our magnificent moon from the the award-winning author of science books for children. Shining light on all kinds of fascinating facts about our moon, this simple, introductory book includes information on how…. It includes buses, cars, and more. In her books, Gibbons teaches kids about the world.
She has written about many topics. These include volcanoes, deserts, farming, and our galaxy. Many of her books are about animals. Her new book is Transportation. To get ideas, Gibbons talks with students about their interests. She also gets inspiration from her home in Vermont. Gail Gibbons does research before writing. She visited two islands for her book on rain forests. Gibbons does lots of research before starting a book. Sometimes, her research involves travel.
Her husband takes pictures. Gibbons uses them to create her illustrations. Gibbons visits schools to talk about her work. Born in Oak Park, Illinois, in , Gibbons showed artistic talents at an early age. As she wrote in an entry for Something about the Author Autobiography Series SAAS , "there has always been a need for me to put words down on paper and draw and paint pictures. Soon with a reputation as the class artist, Gibbons created small books and "writing and drawing pictures of what I loved and where I wanted to be," as she recalled in SAAS.
While visits to the nearby Chicago Art Institute inspired her drawing, books became a passion for the young Gibbons as well, and each night she would read long past the time for lights-out.
By high school, art became a refuge for the shy teenager, and after graduation she applied and was accepted to the University of Illinois where she studied art.
I wanted to be a writer and artist. College was a revelation to Gibbons, and she was particularly inspired by one of her instructors, a professional illustrator of children's books who "became sort of an idol to me.
Helping to support the household while her husband finished his degree, Gibbons took her first job in television, working for a local station in Champaign, Illinois, doing set design, animations, and on-air graphics. It was at this point in her career that she first thought about creating children's books, inspired by the children she was working with on air.
Gibbons's life took a radical turn in , when her husband died in an accident. Emotionally distraught, she turned to her art. Picking an agent out of the yellow pages at random, she submitted her portfolio, and the agent encouraged her to get to work on a children's book. Deciding to take the subject of set theory as her topic, Gibbons discovered that her years in television came in very handy. Bold, flat colors lend themselves to simplicity.
After producing her first few books, Gibbons left New York for a part-time home on Cape Cod, and in married her Massachusetts landlord, Kent Ancliffe. With her husband and two stepchildren, she moved to Vermont, where Ancliffe built a house on two hundred and forty acres. After being advised to turn her hand to children's nonfiction, a bit of market research convinced Gibbons that this was a good idea.
Clocks and How They Go was the first book to show Gibbons's new, simplified style. In this book she does not attempt to tell a story, but to explain concepts as clearly and vividly as possible. Reviewing Clocks and How They Go, Booklist contributor Barbara Elleman wrote that the "inside movements of the weight and spring clock seemingly tick into action with Gibbons's concisely worded text and clean line work," while Ann A.
Flowers wrote in Horn Book, that the work is an "admirable example of the kind of book that explains for the young reader how mechanical things work. Other books on technology include Locks and Keys , which traces the history of such devices and shows the workings of various locks.
Karen Jameyson, writing in As Gibbons shows in her self-illustrated Apples, the rosy fruit is older than Johnny Appleseed, but not by much; it actually came to America with European settlers. Horn Book, noted that Gibbons "has once again skillfully combined a concise, clear text with explicit, attractive illustrations to acquaint young readers with a mechanical subject.
Merrill in Science Books. Other books find Gibbons investigating production processes, such as how apples grow, how honey and paper are made, and how milk gets from the cow to the supermarket. The Seasons of Arnold's Apple Tree does double service by showing the change of seasons as well as the development of apples on a tree. School Library Journal reviewer Harriet Otto commented that the book also "shows the close relationship between a boy and an apple tree," and went on to note that Gibbons's "colorful double-page spreads depict the changing seasons.
More natural "manufacturing" is investigated in The Honey Makers, a book looking at the workings of a hive, following a worker bee from birth through its many jobs.
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