Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
(Sat Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)
How rows of rocks evolved into the intricate circuitry that runs our homes, drives our cars, and orders our pizza.Brown lets al-KhwÄrizmÄ«, the Muslim mathematician who popularized Arabic/Hindu numbers (most notably, for Brown's purposes here, "0" and "1"), take the role of tour guide. He squires readers through centuries of watershed developments from the abacus and mechanical Pascaline calculator to the punch cards of Joseph-Marie Jacquard, ENIAC, IBM, the transistor, and robots. Closing with an explanation of the Turing test, he offers a mildly cautionary view of the increasingly pervasive roles computers play in our daily lives ("will they be doing all the thinking for us?") and an appended disquisition on binary numbers. Along the way he chronicles both major and incremental advances as well as offering nods to significant thinkers and doers familiar (Ada Lovelace, Steve Jobs) or otherwise—notably Jean Jennings and six other women charged with figuring out how to program ENIAC but not invited to its unveiling. Though he acknowledges in an afterword that his cast is largely white, European, and male he does what he can throughout to diversify itâ¦and cogently observes at the end that the "domination of the West in the sciences has ended." Panels are drawn in a loose style that lightens the substantial informational load.Another terrific case study on the power of a big idea to work profound changes in our lives. (endnotes, timeline) (Graphic nonfiction. 8-11)
School Library Journal Starred Review
(Sat Feb 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)
Gr 3-7 Brown continues his "Big Ideas That Changed the World" series with a look at machines through the ages. Ancient mathematician Muhammad ibn-MuÌ
saÌ
al-KhwaÌ
rizmiÌ
offers readers a primer on technology, from the abacus to 16th-century thinker Blaise Pascal's Pascaline ("a shoebox-sized gadget that used gears, wheels, axles, and dials to add numbers") to Ada Lovelace's analytical machine to the early computers used by NASA, and, finally, to smartphones. As in Rocket to the Moon , Brown adeptly explains how scientists and thinkers stand on the shoulders of giants, each building upon earlier technology and advancing knowledge. The narrative is quick and engaging, accompanied by Brown's familiar watercolors. Expressive characters, visual humor, and details that will reward careful readers, along with asides from al-KhwaÌ
rizmiÌ
("Not bad for a self-taught engineer!"), infuse this informative work with wit and verve. Those left wanting more will appreciate the time line, notes about binary code, and the thorough bibliography. VERDICT Accessible, occasionally funny, and always thoughtful, this speedy but thorough trip through time is a must for budding scientists. Jody Kopple, Shady Hill School, Cambridge, MA
Kirkus Reviews
(Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
How rows of rocks evolved into the intricate circuitry that runs our homes, drives our cars, and orders our pizza.Brown lets al-KhwÄrizmÄ«, the Muslim mathematician who popularized Arabic/Hindu numbers (most notably, for Brown's purposes here, "0" and "1"), take the role of tour guide. He squires readers through centuries of watershed developments from the abacus and mechanical Pascaline calculator to the punch cards of Joseph-Marie Jacquard, ENIAC, IBM, the transistor, and robots. Closing with an explanation of the Turing test, he offers a mildly cautionary view of the increasingly pervasive roles computers play in our daily lives ("will they be doing all the thinking for us?") and an appended disquisition on binary numbers. Along the way he chronicles both major and incremental advances as well as offering nods to significant thinkers and doers familiar (Ada Lovelace, Steve Jobs) or otherwise—notably Jean Jennings and six other women charged with figuring out how to program ENIAC but not invited to its unveiling. Though he acknowledges in an afterword that his cast is largely white, European, and male he does what he can throughout to diversify itâ¦and cogently observes at the end that the "domination of the West in the sciences has ended." Panels are drawn in a loose style that lightens the substantial informational load.Another terrific case study on the power of a big idea to work profound changes in our lives. (endnotes, timeline) (Graphic nonfiction. 8-11)