This was a great nonfiction chapter book to read to my kids about one of the most brilliant persons who ever lived. It kept both of my kids interested (ages 4 and 7) but also taught me new things about this artist/scientist/inventor as well! For instance, I never knew Leonardo da Vinci was a vegetarian and wrote backward and in reverse (mirror writing) in all his journals! My kids were introduced to Leonardo in the Peabody and Sherman movie (where they travel back in time) and wanted to learn more about him. Great companion book! Of course, some of the gruesome details of Leonardo DaVinci’s life were altered (like digging up graves to study the human anatomy changed to “observing dissected bodies in a university”) but that can be expected since it was a children’s novel.
This is a pretty cool fact tracker, focusing on Leonardo's many different pursuits- Art, Invention, Science, as well as showing some of his inventions sketches. As usual, it has a good list of websites, books, museums and dvds for further research. This is the fact tracker to Monday with a Mad Genius
In this book, the reader learns about Leonardo da Vinci, where he lived, what ideas, questions, and inventions he had, what paintings and sculptures he did, and how he studied plants, animals and the human body. He was so curious!
Important people in his life are also introduced. It is a wonderful resource!
I love these books. I always learn so much. In this one I learned why plague doctors in the renaissance wore masks that looked like bird beaks. I’m not going to spoil it for you but it made a lot of sense. So interesting!
Another read aloud with my son. He really enjoyed learning all the facts about this great artist and inventor. We are pairing with with the companion Magic Tree House book.
We really enjoyed the book, Monday with a Mad Genius as well as Da Wild, Da Crazy, Da Vinci and our girls are fascinated with Leonardo da Vinci - especially our oldest. This book has a unique twist where they printed the pages upside down and backwards (so you turn the book over and start from the back.) It's a bit of a gimmick, but creative, and I suppose it's too help us remember that he wrote backward using mirror writing so that his hand didn't smudge the ink as he wrote. The information in this book is fascinating. I learned a lot about Leonardo, along with our girls and I'm glad that they emphasized that he was so much more than just an artist. We would only read a chapter or less at a time, so it took us quite awhile to read the entire book. We've read all of the books in the Magic Tree House series and we are catching up with the nonfiction companion research guides.
In 2009, Mary Pope Osborne and her sister Natalie Pope Boyce published the Magic Tree House Fact Trackers entitled Leonardo da Vinci. This book is a nonfiction research guide to the book entitled Monday with a Mad Genius by Mary Pope Osborne which was published in 2007. The book is an introduction to the life of Leonardo da Vinci for young people. Hopefully, this book allows the reader to do more research into the life of Leonardo da Vinci. I thought this book was a good introduction to the life of da Vinci for young people. The illustrator for this book was Sal Murdocca. Similar to the other books in the Magic Tree House Fact Trackers series, the book has a section on how to do more research for young readers about Leonardo da Vinci. The book also provides a good introduction to the Italian Renaissance for young people. The book has an index and includes photo credits. The book had a scientific consultant, an art history consultant, and an educational consultant. Osborne and Boyce seem to really enjoy researching the life of Leonardo da Vinci. I believe Osborne’s and Boyce’s Leonardo da Vinci is a well-done introduction to the life of da Vinci for young people, that hopefully inspires the reader to do more research into the life of da Vinci.
Another fascinating fact filled edition in the Magic Tree House companion books. I wish we had been reading these wonderful companion books through our entire Magic Tree House ride! Now we read an occasional one here and there when we are covering that topic or person in school. Since we are currently learning about Leonardo da Vinci in art this made for a fantastic addition to our curriculum. We were fortunate enough to attend a traveling Da Vinci exhibit a number of years ago and even though my daughter was rather young the experience is something she has never forgotten and I would highly recommend anyone to patron one if they are ever lucky enough to have one of these hands on mobile museums come nearby.
The juvenile non-fiction aisles at the library have a special thrill for me. There's so much interesting information (colorfully illustrated, too)singing it's siren call for me. Getting it to my children is another matter. That is why I love the idea of the Magic Treehouse research guides. As a companion volume to a series she already loves, my daughter consumed a few of these non-fiction volumes. Just like the others, Leonardo Da Vinci is easily accessible, highly illustrated, and fun-factful information for elementary aged learners. Let 'em soak up the good stuff!
Three cheers for Mary Pope Osborne and three cheers for engaging non-fiction!
This is what I really love about the Magic Tree House books. I think it's fabulous that they encourage young readers to explore nonfiction subjects in depth—not only through the stories themselves, but also in the nonfiction companions that Osborne writes. This particular book, the companion to MONDAY WITH A MAD GENIUS, is filled with interesting (but age-appropriate) details about Renaissance Italy and the great Leonard da Vinci. Despite being an art history major who spent a semester living in Florence, Italy, I still learned some interesting facts about Leonardo.
Leonardo is such a real-life superhero that it's almost impossible to write a children's non-fiction book that really brings out his awesomeness. This book certainly doesn't. I'll give it props for laying out the fame relationship between Leonardo, Michelangelo, and Raphael. But I take issue with it not mentioning Donatello. Yes, I know he's not in the same league as the others, but the little ones DON'T CARE. They already know the name from the Ninja Turtles; the least this book could do was give them some background on the real artist.
A remarkably fun look at Da Vinci in this non-fiction supplement to the Magic Tree House series. Knowing the amount of research and thought that goes into these books by author Mary Pope Osborne (writing here with her sister) makes the whole body of works stand out so much more in my opinion. And my son enjoyed listening to these facts with their smooth narrative presentation almost as much as he listens to fiction books!
Eleanor says: this book was interesting because I like to learn about stuff from a long time ago. One of my favorite things that was he never gave. Leonardo was a great artist. He had so many ideas.
Momma says: This was a really great introduction to the genius of Leonardo da Vinci. I can’t imagine living in his time period, knowing all that he knew, and not being able to build or create the things that he wanted to.
Each of the fact checker accompaniment books are fun to read and learn the truths about the varied characters in The Magic Tree House Series. Leonardo Da Vinci is no exception and even found facts that, as an adult, I did not know! I recommend the entire series to any child interested in fun adventures, learning a little along the way and rememberable main characters.
I acutually think goodreads should give more stars instead of just five. They are such good books. I really never knew that he was a great artist, but that is what it says in the book.