Owl Magazine editors
Author of The Kid's Question & Answer Book (Discovery Toys Book)
About the Author
Works by Owl Magazine editors
Owl's Question & Answer Book #1: Answers Questions Kids ask About Birds Cats Bats UFOs and More (1983) 16 copies
Would You Believe It?: Answers to Kid's Questions About Nature, Science and the World Around Them (1989) 8 copies
The New Kid's Question and Answer Book: Questions Kids Ask About Nature, Science and the Environment (1993) 7 copies
Summer Fun: A Book Full of Things To Do in Good Weather (Owl Magazine / Golden Press Book) (1993) 4 copies
The Kid's Questions & Answer Book 3 copies
Owl's Amazing but True No. 2 2 copies
The Kids' Cat Book 1 copy
Ocean Creatures 1 copy
Le béluga du Saint-Laurent 1 copy
The Kids' Horse Book 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
Members
Reviews
Although not a highly informative work, this book would still be useful in the classroom as a resource for ideas of kid's projects. The projects are relatively simple, yet seem like something fun that kids could do while also learning a little about how they can help improve the environment. It is not a great source of information, but it does work as a launch-pad to get kids thinking and doing. Also, the back of the book offers more resources for students to look up if they wish to learn more.
NOT A REVIEW - but a noteworthy pagination notation:
The reasoning for the pagination in this book is pretty tough to comprehend. The first numbered page is page 6 (a verso page). This would make page 5 (a recto page) the first page in the book. if you continue to count down and move past the front end paper to the cover, THEN you would be at page #1... as intended by the publisher. With that said, I counted the rear end papers and the rear cover as well. doing this gives on a tally of 80 show more pages. I had an amazingly wonderful friend once tell me that every book should have a total page count that is divisible by eight, and in this book eighty works out great. show less
The reasoning for the pagination in this book is pretty tough to comprehend. The first numbered page is page 6 (a verso page). This would make page 5 (a recto page) the first page in the book. if you continue to count down and move past the front end paper to the cover, THEN you would be at page #1... as intended by the publisher. With that said, I counted the rear end papers and the rear cover as well. doing this gives on a tally of 80 show more pages. I had an amazingly wonderful friend once tell me that every book should have a total page count that is divisible by eight, and in this book eighty works out great. show less
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 31
- Members
- 218
- Popularity
- #102,473
- Rating
- 3.0
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 28










