Give Me a Hand

The Secrets of Hands, Feet, Arms, and Legs

Give Me a Hand

by Melis­sa Stewart

Bench­mark Books, 2010

for Grades 3 to 5

ISBN 978–0‑76144–158‑8

Pur­chase this book at your local inde­pen­dent book­seller or Amazon.com.

The live­ly, con­ver­sa­tion­al tone and blend of pho­tos and car­toon-style art make Give Me a Hand: The Secrets of Hands, Feet, Arms, and Legs a per­fect blend of fun facts and seri­ous sci­ence learn­ing about grab­bing, grasp­ing, and mov­ing from place to place. Here at last — a book that’s irrev­er­ent enough to cap­ti­vate young read­ers, yet author­i­ta­tive enough to win the praise of teach­ers, librar­i­ans, and parents.

Honors and Awards

  • Soci­ety of Children’s Book Writ­ers and Illustrator/Anna Cross Gib­lin Non­fic­tion Research Grant

Reviews

“The Gross and Goofy Body [series of books] enlivens phys­i­ol­o­gy for kids, offer­ing humor­ous yet sci­en­tif­ic sur­veys of body func­tions in just under 50 pages each. Kids in grades 2–4 will find [these books] appeal­ing and fun. Each blends pho­tos with fun car­toons and pho­tos of kids, along with plen­ty of basic phys­i­ol­o­gy.” (Chil­dren’s Book­watch)

“Despite its irrev­er­ent moniker, the Gross and Goofy Body series offers detailed sci­ence facts in a fash­ion approach­able enough to make it a wel­come sup­ple­ment to school text­books. Each vol­ume takes on a part or func­tion of the body and then goes through the paces of descrip­tion, metaphor, exam­ples, data, and, most exten­sive­ly, com­par­i­son to our ani­mal coun­ter­parts. … the lay­out is fresh, clean, and col­or­ful, side­bars keep things con­ver­sa­tion­al, and the back mat­ter is sol­id.” (Book­list)

Behind the Book

“Of all the books in this series, this one ini­tial­ly made me the most ner­vous. When I start­ed out, I wasn’t sure there’d be enough fas­ci­nat­ing facts to make this book as inter­est­ing as the oth­ers. Boy, was I wrong. I should know by now that if you do dili­gent research, you’re almost nev­er let down. The world is a weird and wacky place.

“What did my research uncov­er? Well, for starters, I learned that in many ancient cul­tures, body parts were used to mea­sure things. I also dis­cov­ered that dogs and cats can be either right-hand­ed or left-hand­ed and that a mil­li­pede can have up to 400 legs. Just imag­ine what it would look like doing a jig! See, I told you. Fas­ci­nat­ing stuff.”

Series at a Glance

You’ll also enjoy …

Gross and Goofy Body

Give Me a Hand

by Melis­sa Stewart

Bench­mark Books, 2010

for Grades 3 to 5

ISBN 978–0‑76144–158‑8

Pur­chase this book at your local inde­pen­dent book­seller or Amazon.com.