Magic Tree House Research Guide #19: Leonardo da Vinci: A Nonfiction Companion to Monday with a Mad Genius
- ISBN13: 9780375846656
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Product DescriptionHow has Leonardo da Vinci was interested in flight? What are some of his most famous paintings? Making his scientific ideas measure to what we know today? You can find answers to these questions and more in Magic Tree House Research Guide: Leonardo da Vinci, Jack and Annie’s guide to the mad genius himself. . . . More>>
Tags: Companion, Genius, Guide, House, Leonardo, Magic, Monday, Nonfiction, Research, TREE, Vinci

Posted on January 12th, 2010 at 8:19 pm
This is an excellent book about the life of Leonardo da Vinci. There was information about his early years, was unknown to most and it was an Lift up book. Rating: 5 / 5
Posted on January 12th, 2010 at 10:21 pm
/ / Leonardo / / is the non-fiction companion to the / / Monday with a Mad Genius / / – an adventure with Jack and Annie Leonardo da Vinci, one of the greatest Renaissance man. This guide provides the facts behind the events in / / Monday with a Mad Genius / / including the explanation of why Leonardo released birds from their cages, what really happened with frescoes in the Palazzo Vecchio, and why his writings are inverterad.Som Advice this volume to be very useful to get a student who has just started, things about yourself. The information is organized (the content can always help to get you back on track, and the index is a wonderful memory jogger), the language is easy to understand illustrations and images and makes an effective job to make the text come alive. If the reader wants more, the guide also do very well on other things, or recommend other books to read more details. Rating: 5 / 5
Posted on January 12th, 2010 at 10:29 pm
These companion books are written very well. This was his favorite, I think, because it is a personal and biographical page does. They do not provide the same level of excitement as fictional narratives, but history lessons comprehensive enough that our son was in a position to learn a few things about Italy, the Da Vinci and the life of his time. Now our son wants to visit Venice to see where he lived, is to increase the curiosity enough for me to recommend the book. He also read from cover to cover, which is not hard for a six-year-olds in flow-fiction (fiction tends to be better, so he read straight through). The author has really hit on the right formula for making reading fun for little kids. Rating: 5 / 5