Skip to main content
Displaying 1 of 1
Bridges
2023
Where is it?
Large Cover Image
Trade Reviews
Kirkus Review
A soaring visual tribute to the qualities that both unite bridges and make them individually distinct. From the 10.4-foot-long El Marco Bridge that links Spain with Portugal to the 34-mile Hong Kong--Zhuhai--Macau Bridge--an undulating ribbon in Majewski's painted overview that sweeps elegantly into the distance and out of sight over the edge of the page--this gallery of nearly two dozen examples, drawn from every continent except Antarctica and Australia, offers both a dazzling catalog of engineering wonders and an opportunity to reflect on their commonalities. "All over the world," the author/illustrator writes, "bridges connect." Some, as his pithy captions and brief endnotes indicate, connect cities, countries, or even continents; others, like the Pont du Gard in Paris or Alabama's Edmund Pettis Bridge, are historic sites that link our past and present. Whether made of steel, stone, or, like the Umshiang Double-Decker Root Bridge in Meghalaya, India, of living wood, some soar high overhead, while others run just over or even under water. His groups of pedestrians, when the figures are large enough to tell, are racially diverse. Dan Zettwoch's work of graphic nonfiction Bridges: Engineering Masterpieces (2022) offers a fuller history of bridges and a more systematic look at the nuts and bolts of their construction, but this will do at least as good a job of exciting feelings of wonder at the beauty of bridges as well as their remarkable range of designs and materials. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Grand and thought-provoking. (Informational picture book. 6-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Summary
Bridges can be high or low, long or short, straight or curvy. Some are designed to blend in, while others stand out. But each one tells a story: a reminder of our history, a testament to ingenuity and engineering, an invitation to imagine the possibilities of the future. Literally and symbolically, bridges connect us--to new places, new cultures, and new people.
Librarian's View
Displaying 1 of 1