Terry Denton's Really Truly Amazing Guide to Everything by Terry Denton
Penguin Random House, 2020. ISBN: 9781760898922. 260pp.
(Age: 8+) Highly recommended. This non-fiction book is a delightful
treasure trove of scientific facts and the truth about how the world
works. Ranging from the beginning of the universe through to
explanations of evolution, human anatomy, the animal and plant
world, physics, time, inventions and even Einstein's Theory of
Relativity. The book is well organised into 8 chapters, (bar the
last one) and each is broken down into subheadings with manageable
bite-sized pieces of information. Yet it also connects the
information throughout the book. Some of the information is really
funny and silly and acts to keep the reader amused and on their
toes, such as the checklist of human body parts and the Fact Box
that says, "The average human body contains enough bones to make an
entire skeleton." Or the pages on the domestication of animals and
how horses were a useful form of transportation for humans, but owls
and bees weren't, are complemented with laugh out loud cartoons.
Terry Denton has drawn many really helpful diagrams to support the
facts. There are also oodles of humorous cartoons, involving horse
and bird, monkeys and giant spiders. Denton likes to make himself
and his characters the butt of many jokes. This all serves to
lighten the tone and make this nicely sized, hardbound book all the
more appealing. The choice of font, illustrations and page design
also help make the information easy to read. It is the sort of book
that can be read from end to end but also dipped into or revisited
to get the facts straight. Explanations of scientific principles and
systems are useful no matter what your age. Denton's Guide is an
important antidote to ignorance and does an important thing by
explaining the fundamentals of science in a thorough but
entertaining way.
Jo Marshall