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Review(s) [Group
9]-" Each of these titles provides a comprehensive, yet
easy-to-read overview in large, bold print. Explanations are concise and clear
without being oversimplified, and the arrangement is attractive. Diagrams,
drawings, and photographs appear on every page and complement the text well.
Supplemental information is offered in boxed areas. Each volume covers an
element’s history; where it is found; how it is extracted, purified, and
used; and its chemical reactions. Arsenic includes topics such as the
element’s use as a poison and its industrial applications. Cobalt
discusses the use of the material as a coloring agent, as well as its role in
human health. Lithium describes the chemical’s importance in batteries and
in pharmaceuticals. Molybdenum devotes a chapter to the medical uses of a
radioactive version of the element. The explanations and visuals provided for
specific chemical reactions are especially helpful. In addition, each book has a
spread showing the periodic table and the reason for each element’s
position on it. Useful additions, especially for libraries who own other books
in the
series.–Maren
Ostergard, King County Library System, Issaquah,
WA"
School Library Journal, May
2007
[Group
5]-"Information about the scientific elements for
middle-graders is always welcome. This series organizes each book to provide all
the facts that could possible be called for in a research report-what the
element is, characteristics, habitat, uses, importance-concluding with an
illustration of the periodic table and the specific element's place in it. The
colorful photographs, illustrations, and fact boxes bring to life what could
have been a dull subject. Very readable in the page layouts, these books present
accessible information in a fresh, bright way. These will prove to be the most
popular items on the subject. Look for the other books in this series.
Recommended."
Library Media Connection, April/May
2003
[Silver,
Potassium]-"Readable overviews of these elements. Explanations
are succinct and clear, without being oversimplified, and supplemental
information is provided in boxed sidebars. Relevant diagrams, drawings, and
photographs, mainly in color, appear on every page. Each book covers the
element's history, where it is found, and how it is extracted and purified, as
well as how it is used and its chemical reactions. Silver includes such topics
as the element's role in the history of money, ornaments, and photography.
Potassium details the element's importance in soaps and explosives, and in the
human body. The large, bold text will appeal to younger readers, and the
explanations and visuals provided for specific chemical reactions are especially
helpful. In addition, each book has a spread devoted to the periodic table and
element's particular place in it. Good choices for reports."
School Library Journal, April
2003
[Sodium,
Silicon, Chlorine, Lead]-"These large, readable texts (part of
a series of 15) discuss where these chemicals can be found, how they were
discovered, their characteristics and reactions, and their importance to our
bodies and to our everyday lives. Each book includes colorful diagrams, photos,
charts, and graphs, as well as 'Did You Know' and 'See For Yourself' information
boxes. Readers will discover the atomic makeup and equations of each of the
elements. One of the 'See For Yourself' boxes in Chlorine tells readers how to
make sodium crystals. Lead is written chronologically, beginning with Greece and
Rome, where the element was used in the earliest cosmetics, drinking cups,
pottery, floors, and coins. Glossary; index; periodic table. Recommended."
The Book Report, May/June 2002
[Copper,
Aluminum, Sulfur, Phosphorus]-"The expanding and highly
recommended Benchmark Books 'The Elements' adds four more basic introductions to
its focus on the elements with Copper (0-7614-0945-9, $15.95), Aluminum (0947-5,
$15.95), Sulfur (0948-3, $15.95), Phosphorus (0946-7, $15.95). Each holds 32
pages of basic introductory science facts about the elements, blending chemistry
with fine color photos and discussions of environmental issues, properties, and
where the element is to be found in nature. A wonderful, basic reference series
certain to receive years of use."
Children's Bookwatch, August
2001
[Copper,
Phosphorus, Sulfur]-"These introductions offer clear, basic
information, without oversimplification, in an appealing format. The books cover
each element's history, where it is found, how it is extracted and purified, how
it is used, and its chemical reactions. Phosphorous also includes fertilizers
and environmental issues. Sulfur has sections on its role in fossil fuels and
rubber tires, warfare explosives, and medicine. Numerous full-color photographs,
drawings, and diagrams, as well as boxed sections with additional information,
supplement the texts. The explanations and accompanying visuals that describe
specific chemical reations are especially helpful. In addition, each book has a
double-page spread devoted to the periodic table. Useful additions."
School Library Journal, February
2001
[Calcium,
Hydrogen]-"These attractive and readable series entries
present the basics on their respective subjects. Each volume includes sections
on the element's atomic structure; where and how it occurs in nature; its
reactions, isotopes, and compounds; its uses and practical applications; and
information on the phenomena in which it plays a part. For example, Calcium
covers building materials and the element's role in the body while Hydrogen has
sections on power and water. Each volume also includes the periodic table.
Numerous sidebars give facts and trivia about the elements, scientists, and
related historical events (e.g., the Hindenburg disaster). Good, clear diagrams
help explain the concepts covered in the texts, and full-color and
black-and-white illustrations are generally interesting and informative. These
titles are somewhat simpler than those in the 'Elements' series (Grolier), but
are comparable in appearance and appeal."