This title includes everything you ever needed to know about surviving any time, any place, anywhere - whether it is during the Jurassic age or dark ages to the Victorian era. Packed full of fascinating historical facts, "The Time-Travellers' Handbook" is educational as well as entertaining. This title covers all the different aspects of life in a different age, cookery, games and sporting skills and surviving diseases. It is perfect for girls and boys with a sense of adventure and imagination, nobody should be without "The Time-Travellers' Handbook".
Emma Fischel grew up in the country, the middle of five children, and had a happy, muddy childhood. She now lives in London and has three nearly grown-up children of her own – two boys and one girl, all very tall, and extremely useful at changing light bulbs she can’t reach. Emma writes both fiction and non-fiction. Her books have been published by Bloomsbury, Usborne, Watts, and others.
A fun nonfiction book report book that is over 100 pages. Readers will get how-to instructions from ancient history, such as how to create a mummy in Egypt, make silk in China, sweep a chimney in Victorian London, etc. The illustrations are funny too.
I bought this book (in German) because it sounded like a lot of fun, but in the end it was just okay. It's very easily written and with that a fast read. The sound of the writing is very childish, but the stories have sometimes parts that I wouldn't read to children - so that does not really fit. The crafting and game tips are nice, as well as the illustrations. But overall I didn't enjoy the book.
This is an exciting book to learn about history and culture from. In each chapter, you'll meet a person who'll teach you or ask you to join their activities, from sweeping a chimney in Victorian England to writing on a clay tablet in Ancient Mesopotamia. It's so much fun not only because it's put in a simple language and very hilarious, but also because you feel like you're actually involved in the events. You get to learn about history from people's stories and directly from your experience, which are not at all boring, especially compared to reading a thick history book (snores). One thing I wish this book could've done differently is writing chapters on SE Asian/ Australian/ Central African history. There are enough of WW II or the Vikings and I would've loved to 'explore' other continents as well.
I read this to my son. We both really enjoyed reading it. It is a boy who jumps around through different historical time periods and teaches you how to survive in that time period. It has fun activities that go along with it as well. It has fun things like: how to tackle a T Rex, how to defend a medieval castle, and how to fight with a samurai. It is great because it teaches about history in a really fun way.
What a fun book! My friend got this for me after he read it, and I agree with him – cool book, dude! In this book, you can learn How to Hunt a Mammoth, How to Join the American Gold Rush, How to Fight with the Samurai, and about thirty other things from all across history. The book is really written for middle schoolers (grades 4 to 7, most likely) but I found it to be a refreshing and fun fast read.
A quick easy read, the book is divided into 2-4 page time travel visits where you "experience" doing something in a particular time period: embalming a mummy, painting a cave drawing, playing Mayan ball, making papyrus, harvesting silk from silkworms... Intelligently written for younger kids, a good way to get them to learn about the world and history, I learned several facts that I didn't know. Well worth reading with your younger kids.
I love this book! It is written very simply but nevertheless interesting to a wide age group. People ages 8-12 will definitely enjoy this book. It is a nice, easy, and fun way to learn about history. I love how each chapter has its own little do-it-yourself craft to further immerse yourself into the reading. The illustrations are great and informative as well.
Not as much as an entertaining book as it had the possibility of being. A way to teach about history, yes. Background and theories on time travel (paradoxes?), and you'll find nothing. I was definitely expecting more.
A nicely written little book for children that teaches about various events and periods of history in a fun way. Includes occasional activities for the reader to do at home too.
Well, it's really a whacky and wooly adventure being a time traveler. Enjoy history with this special book and learn many practical things you can apply to the future.