Australia's greatest inventions and innovations by Christopher Cheng and Linsay Knight
Random House, 2012. ISBN 9781 742755649.
(Ages: 9+) Recommended. Non fiction. Inventions. Published in
association with the Powerhouse Museum, this eye catching book is full
of the most intriguing and fascinating pieces of information about our
inventions and inventors to grab the most fastidious of readers. Boys
will line up to peruse the book and pull out trivia to discuss with
their friends, girls will use the book to cover questions asked in
research assignments and the astute teacher will use the many stories
to add magic to the classroom discussions. As a teacher librarian, one
thing I was always asked for was a book about inventions, and here it
is.
From the expected Vegemite, Penicillin and Sunshine Harvester, to the
surprising, Dual Flush Toilet, Didgeridu and Plastic Banknotes, to the
now unsurprisingly neglected Cafe Bar, each invention is given several
pages of fascinating and broad ranging facts. Divided into sections,
Communication, Health, Agriculture, Household, Energy and Environment,
Leisure, Manufacturing, Trade and Research, each invention begins with
a problem, then how the researchers tackled answering that problem,
then the final result, with a side box of information about the
inventor.
Spray-on skin, for example began with the problem of treating burns
quickly and so reduce the probability of scarring. There follows
several paragraphs about the work of Dr Fiona Wood, a plastic surgeon
in Perth, who in the 1990's grew skin in the laboratory, and from there
improved the skin to become a spray-on skin. She was awarded an Order
of Australia medal for her work which is now used world wide.
This is a fabulously entertaining and informative book, one I have
dipped in and out of for the weeks it has sat on my table, and one with
a range of uses in the classroom and at home, rivaling the Guinness
Book of Records.
Fran Knight