Over at Watch. Connect. Read., Mr. Schu is unveiling the cover of Whoosh!: Lonnie Johnson’s Super-Soaking Stream of Inventions. That’s my upcoming picture book with Don Tate, the follow up to our first collaboration, The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch. Whoosh!, a biography of the inventor of the Super Soaker water gun, comes out […]
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Whoosh!, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
.jpg?picon=423)
Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Don Tate, Chris Barton, Charlesbridge, Lonnie Johnson, The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch, Whoosh!, Add a tag
.jpg?picon=423)
Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Shark Vs. Train, Trent Reedy, Matthew Winner, The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch, Whoosh!, Let's Get Busy, The Nutcracker Comes to America, Revenge of the Flower Girls, Fay B. Kaigler Children's Book Festival, How Not to Be Popular, Mighty Truck, Revenge of the Angels, Stony Brook Southampton's Children's Literature Fellows, That's Not Bunny!, SCBWI, podcasts, NCTE, giveaway, Texas Library Association, Tom Lichtenheld, Jennifer Ziegler, Don Tate, Chris Barton, Eerdmans, Bartography Express, Burning Nation, 88 Instruments, Add a tag
This month, one subscriber to my Bartography Express newsletter will win a copy of Burning Nation (Scholastic), the second book in Trent Reedy’s Divided We Fall YA trilogy
If you’re not already receiving Bartography Express, click the image below for a look. If you like what you see, click “Join” in the bottom right corner, and you’ll be in the running for the giveaway at the end of this week.
.jpg?picon=423)
Blog: Bartography (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Whoosh!, Don Tate, Charlesbridge, Super Soaker, Lonnie Johnson, Add a tag
There’s a lot that I love about this recent presentation by Lonnie Johnson — rocket scientist, Super Soaker inventor, and pursuer of solutions to the world’s energy problems.
But my favorite part starts at the 5:22 mark with “When I was a kid…” He goes on to discuss how Lost in Space and Robbie the Robot inspired him as a teenager in the 1960s to build his own robot. Except that…
“Nobody told me that the other robots that I was watching [on TV] had people inside.”
Even if he had known, I doubt he would have let it stop him.
And if you’re thinking that Lonnie Johnson would make a great subject for a picture book biography, Don Tate and I agree. Our book, Whoosh! Lonnie Johnson’s Super Stream of Ideas, will be published by Charlesbridge in 2016.