The Human Body for Children


Book Description

This book is a fun and clever guide to the human body that answers children's questions and engages them with photos, illustrations and diagrams. This child-friendly journey goes through the human body and all its systems (respiratory nervous blood ...) and is interspersed with many health tips. This fun and comprehensive anatomy book is the perfect gift for kids wanting to know more about the mysterious stuff going on inside their bodies. 30 pages, 8.5 x 11 inches.




The Human Body


Book Description

A detailed and straightforward guide to the human body helps young readers discover how their bodies work, both inside and outside.




My First Human Body Book


Book Description

Here's the most entertaining way for children to get a good look at the human body and learn how bodies work: 28 fun and instructive, ready-to-color illustrations. Coordinating text explores the muscular, skeletal, nervous, digestive, respiratory, and immune systems, and answers such questions as What is a hiccup? and Where is my DNA?




My First Human Body Coloring Book


Book Description

These 28 fun and instructive illustrations offer an entertaining way for children to learn how their bodies work. Simple text answers such questions as: What is a hiccup? and Where is my DNA? Free Teacher's Manual available. Grades: 1–2.




My First Book of the Human Body


Book Description

Let Collins take you on a journey inside your amazing body. Fun and fact-filled, this is the book for you if you want to know everything about how your body works. The brightly illustrated book will give hours of pleasure as well as help with school work and projects.







Rocks, Rivers and the Changing Earth


Book Description

This illustrated introduction to geology offers young readers insights into everyday signs of our constantly changing environment. Fascinating subjects include rivers of ice, the rise of volcanoes, and the formation of precious stones.




Eyes, Nose, Belly, Toes


Book Description

All about the human body for kids 1 to 3! "All kids will see themselves in this beautiful book, intentionally designed to help toddlers learn about the amazing things their bodies can do." — Emily Oster, CEO of ParentData and bestselling author of Expecting Better, Cribsheet, and The Family Firm. Learning how the human body works is an important skill for toddlers. This adorable kids anatomy book walks them through every major body part, with simple language and vibrant artwork that keep them engaged as they explore how they use their eyes to see, their nose to smell, their legs to move, and their arms to wave hello! Colorful illustrations—Read along with your child and explore exciting pictures that show kids the body parts they use at playtime, bathtime, snacktime, and more. Which body part is that?—Help your child learn to point out their belly button, count their fingers and touch their elbows! Learning and growing—Make it fun for kids to learn body vocabulary and start to discover all the amazing things their bodies can do. Get this book today and enjoy educational quality time with your child.




On the Fabric of the Human Body


Book Description

Norman anatomy series, no. 1-3; Norman landmarks series, no. 1-2, 4; v. 1 issued as no. 4 in Norman orthopedic series.




The Abject of Desire


Book Description

The Abject of Desire approaches the aestheticization of the unaesthetic via a range of different topics and genres in twentieth-century Anglophone literature and culture. The “experience of disgust”, which Winfried Menninghaus describes as “an acute crisis of self-preservation”, is correlated with conceptualizations of gender in theories of the abject/abjection. In view of this general crisis of identity in the experience of disgust, the contributions to this volume discuss examples of the aestheticization of the unaesthetic in cultural representations and locate conceptual (re)codings of the body, gender, and identity with regard to the abject as an immediate and uncompromising experience on the one hand, and a social and political phenomenon on the other. Considering a variety of cultural narratives by writers as diverse as Samuel Delany, Sarah Schulman, Joyce Carol Oates, Leslie Marmon Silko, Paul Magrs, J. G. Ballard, Stevie Smith, T. C. Boyle, Joseph Conrad, Poppy Z. Brite, and Will Self, by film directors John Waters and Peter Greenaway, playwrights Girish Karnad and Mahesh Dattani, and “body artist” Gunter von Hagens, the contributors to this volume scrutinize different implications of the ambivalent concept of the abject/abjection.