The Facts on File Junior Visual Dictionary - Hardcover

Corbeil, Jean-Claude

 
9780816023356: The Facts on File Junior Visual Dictionary

Synopsis

Based on The Facts On File Visual Dictionary, this beautiful new book does for youngsters what that highly acclaimed resource has done for adults--it allows them to look up an image to find out its name, or determine the nature of an object they've heard described but cannot visualize. More than 650 full-color illustrations. Size D. CC

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

From School Library Journal

Grade 2-6-- An edition of a book published in 1986 for adults--enlarged in size, reduced in content, and illustrated in color instead of black and white. The 22 sections contain computer-produced pictures of such objects as animals, houses, heavy machinery, the human body, the sky, the vegetable kingdom, etc. Each picture is bold, bright, and clearly labelled. The computer graphics are very nearly crystalline, but they do have a curiously two-dimensional look. The items may be accessed from a table of contents or from an impressively comprehensive index. This is not a visual dictionary in the classic sense, as is Greet's My First Picture Dictionary (Lothrop, 1970; o.p.), as there are no written definitions to accompany the pictures. The labels must suffice. This approach has its strengths and weaknesses. It's all very well to see a picture of a saxophone with all its parts painstakingly labelled, but a child (and some adults) might wonder just what this object does. The only clue here is that it's in the "Music" section. Also, the book shows its French origin in the machines found in "Heavy Machinery;" in some terms in the "Sports" section; and, most glaringly, in the road signs shown in the "Symbols" section, which resemble but differ significantly from ours. In the pictures of the human body that show a nude man and woman from the front and back, the woman's genitalia are labelled simply "sex." This seems an odd circumlocution. Nonetheless, the book is useful for showing exactly how things (especially things mechanical) go together, and is practically unbeatable for browsing. In certain areas, the "Eyewitness" books (Knopf) may be preferable as they give more information. However, this would be a popular and practical addition to most school dictionary collections. --Ann Welton, University Child Development School, Seattle
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.

Other Popular Editions of the Same Title

9780816022229: The Facts on File Junior Visual Dictionary

Featured Edition

ISBN 10:  0816022224 ISBN 13:  9780816022229
Publisher: Facts on File, 1989
Hardcover