Fotografía de autor
11 Obras 178 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Obras de Peggy Thomson

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female

Miembros

Reseñas

A very interesting book that instead of presenting you with something you already know takes you back behind the scenes. You are introduced to the warren of the Smithosonian and the various people who are the actual backbone whether it seems to be someone with a very interesting job or what we would call a secondary job or even what we may perceive as a job that is so boring that we wouldn't want to touch it even if we were paid for it. And as they say while it holds true it takes a village.

The whole idea for this book was risky in and of itself for as the author says there are so may people to talk to and one subject almost always leads to another. I can imagine the author had just as much problems as those that she talked to on what to add to her book, what to leave out and how to present it in a fashion for the reader so they are drawn into something that would seem like it may be extremely dry reading.

There were some job descriptions and some of the people that were presented that were dry and didn't catch my attention. These would have been the ones I would have skimmed if I was skimmer but then there were others who caught my attention even if I didn't think to be interested in that particular job description. It was fascinating to learn about the process, the evolution of the museum and the passion that fills the people behind the walls although I know the book is truly outdated.

I had just finished visiting the Science Center not even a week ago that we had here in town and was thinking about its presentation. I was comparing what I was reading to the other museums that I had been to whether personal-owned like the Arabia Steamboat Museum or the various zoos. Seeing how the atmosphere differed whether it was a small one-theme museum like the Molly Brown House or the massive yet always changing Denver Museum of Nature and Science. It is amazing to know you pass by a bunch of museum staff while your mind doesn't connect all the work with what you are presented with to learn.

The book is outdated and most likely several of the exhibits that were mentioned have been discontinued (I tried looking up the schoolroom one to get a view but couldn't find it), which is a shame. Yet even with its outdated information and the stories of those who may no longer work there it continues to teach us another lesson that for us to grow there must be change and that change isn't bad when it continues to teach us. This has been a treasured find for me....
… (más)
 
Denunciada
flamingrosedrakon | Oct 3, 2015 |
Siggy's Spaghetti Works, we follow Siggy and a class through the inner workings of a pasta factory. The story tells of all types of pasta, how it is made, what machines help produce it, and where Siggy thinks it originated. Siggy even goes on to tie in pasta and history. He highlights historical figure, Thomas Jefferson's likeness of pasta, the song about Yankee Doodle Dandy. "Je stuck a feather in his hat and -- the big showoff -- called it macaroni." Peggy Thomson makes learning about spaghetti entertaining and fun, but also ties it into pop culture to make it more understandable to kids.… (más)
 
Denunciada
Nijania | Sep 29, 2014 |
This is a great book for any baseball lover. If you live too far away from Louisville to go to the Louisville Slugger Museum this book will do the trick for you. It tells all about how a factory makes wooden and aluminum bats. It also tells about how they make the balls. My favorite part of the book is all the fun facts about the best players of baseball history. This was a great book.
 
Denunciada
LauraMcQueen | Apr 7, 2013 |

Premios

También Puede Gustarte

Estadísticas

Obras
11
Miembros
178
Popularidad
#120,889
Valoración
½ 3.5
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
19

Tablas y Gráficos