Close Up & Far Out: Seeing the World Differently
by Mary Auld and Adria Meserve; illus. by Adria Meserve
Primary, Intermediate Creative Editions 40 pp.
8/24 9781568463537 $19.99
Seventeenth-century “natural philosophers” Galileo Galilei (who looked out into the universe using a telescope) and Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (who looked closely into water droplets with a microscope) made their important scientific discoveries in astronomy and microbiology, respectively, using innovative improvements to the glass lens. As the cleverly constructed narrative moves chronologically through the lives of both scientists, it steps back and forth between them, highlighting the parallels in their experiences as well as emphasizing the practices and passions of science. Both men had creative aha moments, were meticulous inventors, and remained patient in the face of setbacks on their paths to discovery. They also depended on the scientific community and larger society for patronage and acceptance or rejection of their published scientific models, which led to challenges—Galileo with the Catholic church and Leeuwenhoek with his unwillingness to share his lens technologies. Meserve’s entertaining and informative illustrations are filled with details about the scientists, their objects of study, and the places and times in which they lived; the compositions employ inventive designs to underscore common features of the scientists’ lives and work. Galileo and Leeuwenhoek are united in spirit in the final illustration of stars, planets, and the Milky Way filling the sky above a pond crowded with bacteria, microbes, and other tiny living creatures.
From the ">November/December 2024 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.
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