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How Does Soap Clean Your Hands?

The Science Behind Healthy Habits

Madeline J. Hayes Srimalie Bassani

9781486720743
32 pages
Flowerpot Childrens Press
Overview

Have you ever wondered how soap cleans your hands, or how eating healthy makes your body stronger?

In the How Do series, readers are invited to guess and then explore the science behind the right answers. How does medicine work, the significance of hand-washing, or why exercise keeps you energized? This fully illustrated picture book explores the science behind basic health habits through diagrams, photos, and informative and engaging text, in this newest addition to the How Do series.

About the How Do series: These visually appealing STEM titles for inquisitive readers and young science enthusiasts, are fully illustrated nonfiction picture books that are a great introduction to various STEM topics. Each title includes facts and figures, simple diagrams and hilarious illustrations and is written in a question-and-answer format to encourage readers to ask questions and guess the answers before exploring the science behind the correct answers.

Author Bio

Madeline Hayes is a self-described science nerd. She loves it! Especially biology and chemistry. She has a B.S. with Honors in chemical and biomolecular engineering, pre-medicine and a minor in chemistry from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, class of 2018. Madeline has expertise in engineering, chemistry, and mass cytometry and works using these skills to assist with research at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN. She isn’t sure where her work and learning will take her, but she knows science will be at the core of her career and she credits that love of science to the many awesome teachers she’s had through the years.

Srimalie Bassani lives and works in Mantova, Italy. Her mother has always encouraged her artistic expression, and she is the inspiration for her passion. Her work is full of surprises. She always tries to diversify her style based on every story she illustrates. It's almost impossible to remove her from her writing desk, where she keeps a stack of books and teacups of many colors.