Publisher's Weekly Review
For once ``incredible'' isn't an overstatement. This dazzling book offers spread after spread of cutaway illustrations that reveal the hidden architecture of 18 celebrated structures, from a Gothic cathedral to a coal mine to the space shuttle. Details are so intricate that the reader will be tempted to reach for a magnifying glass--somehow Biesty conveys a sense of both the proverbial forest and its trees. Two foldouts, each nearly three feet in length, suggest the majestic scale of their subjects: respectively, the ocean liner Queen Mary and a steam train built in 1928. Laid out in the unmistakable Dorling Kindersley style, the artwork is then linked to paragraphs of quirkily explanatory text (one item about galleons proclaims that sailors killed 4000 rats on an Atlantic crossing in 1622; the jumbo jet information includes a description of how air is vented from toilets and how waste is disposed of). Sites are pan-Atlantic--the Empire State Building is shown along with the London Underground--so readers won't mind that the featured auto factory attaches the steering wheel to the ``wrong'' side of the car. There's not a single misstep in this endlessly entertaining endeavor. All ages. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Horn Book Review
Eighteen cleverly illustrated cutaway drawings give readers a look at the interiors of a castle, coal mine, cathedral, helicopter, and space shuttle. Diagram notes are often humorous, but technical information is sometimes incomplete, assuming knowledge that youngsters may not have. Nevertheless, children will enjoy the detailed watercolors and the two cross-sections that fold out. Ind. From HORN BOOK 1992, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Biesty, who specializes in historical and architectural cutaway drawings, dissects 18 buildings, vehicles, etc. (castle to space shuttle), to show their veins, sinews, and bones. Each meticulous drawing fills a colorful oversize double spread; two (the Queen Mary and a steam train, The Flying Scotsman) fold out to 40 inches. Introduced by brief texts and surrounded by captions incorporating historical lore, facts, and anecdotes, they contain hundreds of minute details of construction and function. Readers may get as compulsive about this fascinating book as they do about Waldo (one challenge here is to find figures sitting on toilets--there are at least ten). The drawings don't yield all their secrets easily: considerable effort is needed to piece together what's going on in the automobile factory or on the North Sea oil rig. Still, this pictorial information will be absorbed in a more integrated way than from a linear text. In one or two places captions point to the wrong area of a drawing, and they are occasionally marred by silly puns. One error: 747's don't normally use microwave ovens-- they're far too inefficient for bulk food, and could interfere with the radio. Overall: vastly entertaining and instructive. Index. (Nonfiction. 8-80+)
Booklist Review
Gr. 4-7. Readers will be mesmerized by these intricately drawn illustrations featuring models of a varied assortment of vehicles and edifices. From the inner workings of a fourteenth-century European castle to the life-sustaining intimacies of the space shuttle orbiter, the detailed drawings are fascinatingly realistic. But while the visuals can steal the show, the well-researched text should not be overlooked. Brief introductions provide basic facts about an oil rig, a World War II German submarine, and a jumbo jet, while paragraphs of information strategically spaced around the double-page spreads identify, explain, and relate memorable anecdotes about particular components or compartments of the Royal Opera House, a Spanish galleon, and the Empire State Building. The entries for the British ocean liner Queen Mary and for the Flying Scotsman, a luxurious twentieth-century steam train, feature pages that open out to dazzling three-foot-long presentations. A sense of humor flavors both art and text in the striking oversize volume guaranteed to intrigue browsers and serious researchers alike. ~--Ellen Mandel