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The comic first appeared in the Marin Independent Journal, and was offered to them for free. [8] The earlier comic strips were then reprinted in three Science Stuff You Can Do [11] books, a Best of, and was the bases for two specialty books, Beakman & Jax's Bubble Book and Beakman & Jax's Microscope Book.
Rosemary Mosco is a cartoonist and writer working in science communication. She is best known for the science-and-nature comic Bird and Moon, and her graphic novels about nature. She also published a best-selling travel guide for children.
It all starts on an ordinary day, when an alien literally falls on the heads of perfectly ordinary school children. The kids quickly find a common language with the visitor from space, and soon the fun intergalactic company is joined by a four-legged friend - hamster. The earthlings invited the alien to use an old refrigerator to use as spare ...
The Brainwaves are cartoon characters that populate Dorling Kindersley's children's reference books. The first title in the series, "How Nearly Everything Was Invented...by The Brainwaves" was first published in September 2006. It was written by Jilly MacLeod and Illustrated by Lisa Swerling & Ralph Lazar and is available in 14 languages.
Pi wore a green lab coat and a backwards baseball cap, surrounded by a colorful set, and presented experiments that children could perform at home. The format of the science portions was similar to Beakman's World and Bill Nye the Science Guy; all three were produced in response to the 1990 Children's Television Act, which mandated each ...
Of course, Brown has been part of Arthur's life for a lot longer than 25 years. The author created his signature character 46 years ago in the best-selling 1976 children's book Arthur's Nose. That ...
The Journal of Irreproducible Results is a magazine of science humor. [1] It was established in Israel in 1955 by virologist Alexander Kohn and physicist Harry J. Lipkin, who wanted a humor magazine about science, for scientists. [2] It contains a mix of jokes, satire of scientific practice, science cartoons, and discussion of funny but real ...
Larry Gonick (born 1946) is an American cartoonist best known for The Cartoon History of the Universe, a history of the world in comic book form, which he published in installments from 1977 to 2009. He has also written The Cartoon History of the United States , and he has adapted the format for a series of co-written guidebooks on other ...