One Big Pair of Underwear
What’s one thing that two bears, three yaks, four goats, and six cats have in common? They hate to share.
★ February 15, 2023: Announcing the 2023 Mathical Award Winning books! ★
What’s one thing that two bears, three yaks, four goats, and six cats have in common? They hate to share.
This book talks about really big numbers in terms of everyday things, such as the number of basketballs needed to cover New York City.
Nearly Boswell might be the one person who can put all the clues together, and if she doesn’t figure it all out soon—she’ll be next.
Generations of readers have fallen in love with this humorous tale of things inside-out and upside-down, but mathematicians are particularly fond of the series as it was written by one of their own.
Inside this book, families will find fun, mischief-making math problems to tackle—math that isn't just kid-friendly, but actually kid-appealing.
As a young boy in medieval Italy, Leonardo Fibonacci thought about numbers day and night. He was such a daydreamer that people called him a blockhead
The poet J. Patrick Lewis has reimagined classic poems—such as Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven” and Langston Hughes’s “April Rain Song”—and added a dash of math.
In the heart of the city, a small boy travels uptown and down, searching for his friend. Readers will certainly spot the glorious beast, plus an array of big-city icons they can count.
Ivan and Daphne accidentally let their younger cousin, Lila, in on their secret world of Lexicon. The three cousins must escape their own imprisonment before they reunite, provoke a revolution, and …
The secrets revealed in Mathemagic will have kids outwitting everyone with their superior computational skills, mystifying friends by plucking secret numbers from their minds and learning the …
Logan and Benedict get zapped by a feisty robot on a school trip to the museum and lose their math skills. Being “numbed” teaches them just how useful, and even fun, math can be.
Kids will giggle as they count all the animals that have frightened the monkeys off the pages.
Children will count baby animals in watersheds all over North America will singing to the tune of "Over in a Meadow."
New kid Mitch Sloan wants to fit in, but his nerdy love of statistics and making money isn't winning him any friends in his sports-loving town--until he starts running a football betting ring.
Lady Di and Tom Jones follow clues in the form of equations to discover the sordid truth about what's really happening at the Folsom Energy Plant.
Amply illustrated and written in clear, accessible prose, Bennett's book proves anyone can grasp the basics of Einstein's ideas.
When the other numbers get into trouble, Zero swoops in to prove that his talents are innumerable.
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