It'll Never Work: Buildings, Bridges and Tunnels: An Accidental History of Inventions | TheBookSeekers

It'll Never Work: Buildings, Bridges and Tunnels: An Accidental History of Inventions


book 5, Itll Never Work

No. of pages 32

Reviews
Great for age 9-11 years

Have you ever wondered what made human beings want to reach for the skies by building higher and higher? And how they did it? Learn all about the the history of construction in It'll Never Work: Buildings, Bridges and Tunnels, a book that explores the medieval castles, underwater hotels, tunnels under the sea and the successes and failures that have led to the building feats that we know today.

Each title in this exciting, high-interest series looks at a different area of technology and engineering and reveals the pioneering ideas and scientific thinking that enabled its development, as well as exposing those that proved to be a dead end. Each spread examines a particular example in depth, bringing in other similar ideas where relevant, and revealing that experimentation and failure often pave the way to technology success. Beautifully designed and illustrated with infographic-style artwork, this series is an excellent technology resource for readers aged 9 and up.

 

This is book 5 in Itll Never Work .

This book has been graded for interest at 9-11 years.

There are 32 pages in this book. This book was published 2019 by Hachette Children's Group .

Jon Richards is an experienced author of non-fiction books for children.

This book has the following chapters:

  • 1: Brick by brick
  • 1: Stone, wood, steel and glass
  • 1: Castles
  • 1: Places of worship
  • 1: A place to live
  • 1: Buildings for fun
  • 1: Danger zones
  • 1: Towering giants
  • 1: Future buildings
  • 1: Bridging the gap
  • 1: Amazing bridges
  • 1: Tunnels in cities
  • 1: Going underground
  • 1: Glossary
  • 1: Index

This book is in the following series:

It'Ll Never Work
Each title in this exciting, high-interest series looks at a different area of technology and engineering and reveals the pioneering ideas and scientific thinking that enabled its development, as well as exposing those that proved to be a dead end. Each spread examines a particular example in depth, bringing in other similar ideas where relevant, and revealing that experimentation and failure often pave the way to technology success. Beautifully designed and illustrated with infographic-style artwork, this series is an excellent technology resource for readers aged 9 and up.

Itll Never Work

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