Travel along with Einstein on a journey full of curiosity, laughter, and scientific discovery. Parents and children alike will appreciate this moving story of the powerful difference imagination can make in any life.
The Washington Post - Abby McGanney Nolan
Berne's engaging text follows Albert through his childhood, administrative day job and eventual worldwide acclaim, but her emphasis is on his exhilarating contemplations of the universe.
Publishers Weekly
Berne (Manfish) and Radunsky (Hip Hop Dog) create an inspired tribute to Einstein, a man who "asked questions never asked before. Found answers never found before. And dreamed up ideas never dreamt before." The book moves briskly through Einstein's quiet, inquisitive childhood (a magnetic compass helped trigger his interest in the "mysteries in the world—hidden and silent, unknown and unseen") to his accomplishments as an adult. Radunsky's loose, hulking ink caricatures capture the gleam in Einstein's eye at every age. When Berne explains how Einstein helped prove the existence of atoms, Radunsky uses dots to underscore the idea in the accompanying image ("Even this book is made of atoms!" the scientist gleefully explains, breaking the fourth wall). Einstein's lifelong curiosity sings through every page, and Berne emphasizes that readers are heir to that same spirit of discovery. In the closing scene, Radunsky pictures a boy, girl—and dog!—wearing rather Einsteinian plaid suits, staring at a field of question marks with a familiar gleam in their eyes. Ages 6–9. Author's agent: Caryn Wiseman, Andrea Brown Literary Agency. Illustrator's agent: Brenda Bowen, Sanford J. Greenburger Associates. (May)
From the Publisher
"On a Beam of Light reminds us that imagination is important, and that thinking is valuable. A great message for the little scientist in your life!" - Emily, bookseller, Hooray for Books!"Makes genius Albert Einstein seem accessible." - Nerdy Book Club"
It's not easy to explain Einstein to young readers, but this terrific book pulls it off."Bookist Top 10 Biographies for Youth"
It's impossible not to be inspired, not only by Einstein himself but also by this dazzling account of his life and imagination."BookPage"
I was wowed by this book."Robin Smith, The Horn Book Blog"
Einstein's lifelong curiosity sings through every page."-Publishers Weekly, starred review"
Einstein positively glows, radiating love and intelligence."-The Washington Post
Children's Literature - Ken Marantz and Sylvia Marantz
In a simple but informative text, we are introduced to Einstein at his birth, and are astounded to learn that at three he "hardly said a word at all." He looks, wonders, and worries his loving parents. In school, his teachers find his endless questions disrupting. While riding his bike, he is "racing through space on a beam of light" in his questioning mind. He reads, studies, and continues to wonder. Unable to find a teaching job after graduation, he works in a government office where he has time to continue to think and wonder. He helps prove the existence of atoms. He thinks about motion, seeing time and space in a new way. After publication of his ideas, he is declared a genius. To the end of his life, he keeps thinking and figuring, still leaving questions to be answered by other scientists, or us readers. Loose pen and ink drawings using touches of gouache for the visual narrative on off-white pages supply only the barest of Einstein's development. He is depicted as he ages, particularly with his heavy mustache and wild hair. Radunsky keeps the tale light-hearted; for example, he invents a picture made of colored dots to show atomic structure. A complex speech balloon demonstrates the significance of music in his life. The back end pages show eight of his favorite things, humanizing his genius. Extensive notes add further information. Reviewer: Ken Marantz and Sylvia Marantz
School Library Journal
Gr 2–6—The name Einstein is synonymous with genius, but what does that mean to a child? Einstein himself would only admit to being "very, very curious." Berne's picture book offers readers few biographical details, focusing instead on the physicist's intellect through the concepts that puzzled and excited him. He was late to start speaking and not particularly verbal-until he received a compass. As the author explains, "Suddenly he knew there were mysteries in the world-hidden and silent, unknown and unseen." And suddenly, too, he was bursting with questions-questions about magnetism, light, sound, gravity, and later, atoms, motion, and time. This was a person who spent his life "imagining, wondering, figuring and thinking." Radunsky's delightful pen-and-ink illustrations on cornmeal-yellow pages flecked with fibers and earth-tone highlights depict events from the man's life, his thoughts, and a few of his quirks. Einstein's old-world European childhood is reflected in the formal dress of the adults that loom over him. In an image that expresses his love of numbers, computations swirl around him. Selected lines in a large, red font add emphasis, and comments in the few dialogue bubbles are handwritten in a scratchy, black line. An endnote adds information on the physicist's thought experiments, his sense of humor, E=mc², and the atomic bomb. When considering an author's approach, Lynne Barasch's picture book Ask Albert Einstein (Farrar, 2005) and Mareé Ferguson Delano's photobiography, Genius (National Geographic, 2005) are noteworthy comparisons to this richly imagined, beautifully designed, impressionistic biography.—Daryl Grabarek, School Library Journal
Kirkus Reviews
A boy who asked too many questions becomes iconic physicist Albert Einstein, whose questions changed the world. The author of Manfish (illustrated by Eric Puybaret, 2008) presents another dreamer, a man who "asked questions never asked before. / Found answers never found before. / And dreamed up ideas never dreamt before." Story and perfectly matched illustrations begin with the small boy who talked late, watched and thought, and imagined traveling through space on a light beam. Readers see the curious child growing into the man who constantly read and learned and wondered. With gouache, pen and ink, Radunsky's humorous, childlike drawings convey Einstein's personality as well as the important ideas in the text (which are set out in red letters). The narrative text includes several of Einstein's big ideas about time and space; one illustration and the back endpapers include the famous formula. The mottled, textured paper of each page reinforces the concept that everything is made of atoms. A nice touch at the end shows children who might also wonder, think and imagine dressed in the professor's plaid suit. An author's note adds a little more about the person and the scientist. For today's curious children, this intriguing and accessible blend of words and pictures will provide a splendid introduction to a man who never stopped questioning. (Picture book/biography. 6-9)
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