New Scientist Live
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Britannica All New Children’s Encyclopedia
£27.00What We Know & What We Don’t! An amazing 424-page compendium of knowledge to satisfy all curious minds! Packed full of incredible facts you can trust, this All New Children’s Encyclopedia celebrates Britannica’s return to printed books.
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Engineers Making a Difference
£16.99Meet 46 engineers who are changing our world. Find out what makes them tick and how they create awe-inspiring technologies to improve our lives.
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Britannica’s Encyclopedia Infographica
£25.00An awe-inspiring encyclopedia with more than 200 original infographic illustrations – the perfect book for visual learners.
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Evolution
£16.99Discover the story of life on Earth and how it came to be, with real-life scientists Sarah Darwin and Eva Maria Sadowski.
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How to Chat Chicken
£12.99It’s time to walk on the wild side and talk with the animals. This book will teach you not just how to chat chicken but also gossip with gorillas, mumble with meerkats and warble with whales!
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Science FACTopia!
£10.99An enthralling and hilarious journey through the worlds of space, animals, engineering, numbers, machines, and more in 400 connected facts!
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Earth is Big
£14.99See the world in a whole new way by comparing it to other things in the universe, both big and small!
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How to Teach Grown-Ups About Climate Change
£9.99A witty guide to the science behind climate change, which puts kids in charge. Featuring a foreword by internationally renowned climate scientist Dr Michael E. Mann.
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Amazing Animals
£14.99100+ Creatures That Will Boggle Your Mind! The final book in Our Amazing World Series.
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Antarctica: The Melting Continent
£14.99Explore a vast and mysterious frozen continent full of incredible animals, places, people and stories!
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First Big Book of How
£20.00Out in September (UK) and October (US) 2024! A compendious and stunningly illustrated fact-filled book for children who have endless questions about how the world works.
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Galápagos Islands
£15.99Welcome to the Galápagos Islands, a pristine archipelago in the Pacific Ocean, where locals and visiting scientists work among giant tortoises, salt-snorting iguanas, diving penguins and erupting volcanoes. They are looking for just the right balance between humans and nature to lead the world to a sustainable future.