

Rosie Revere, Engineer: A Picture Book (The Questioneers) [Beaty, Andrea, Roberts, David] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Rosie Revere, Engineer: A Picture Book (The Questioneers) Review: LOVE. - I love this book. Let me repeat. I love this book and I loathe picture books. This is a book about the glory of failures, the importance of trying, and the necessity of believing in yourself. Rosie revels in inventing, building, and engineering, there's not a princess in sight. The writing has the lilt and flow of a Dr. Seuss book. The illustrations are beautifully done and capture the spirit of the characters perfectly. Rosie is a great book for girls probably from 2-6, The Girl loves it and we've already had to read it several times a day since she received it on Christmas Eve. Emotions of frustration of failure are turned to the triumph of failure in a way that children can relate to. There's enough silliness in the book (all of the inventions seem to involve cheese) to appeal to children, but not enough to make it intolerable to humbug adults like me. Great-great Aunt Rose teaches Rosie a fine lesson when her cheese-copter crashes after hovering for only a few moments. ""Your brilliant first flop was a raging success! Come on, let's get busy and on to the next!" She handed a notebook to Rosie Revere, who smiled at her aunt as it all became clear. Life might have failures, but this was not it. The only true failure can come if you quit." Great message for all children, but especially girls. It's easy to read with high enthusiasm and excitement. I've not read the original Iggy Peck, Architect but I may have to pick it up next time Little Miss Princess starts to rake on my nerves. Definitely, definitely check it out. Review: Super cute and inspiring story for young girls - Bought this as a birthday present for a 5 yr old girl. She absolutely loved it! Also read this with my old Pre-K class! It is an inspiring story about a young girl and her inventions. It teaches you to keep trying even when you fail and to follow your dreams. Highly recommend and will be buying this for my niece when the time is right.





















| Best Sellers Rank | #4,408 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #30 in Children's Books on Girls' & Women's Issues #87 in Children's Books on Emotions & Feelings (Books) #97 in Children's School Issues |
| Book 2 of 7 | The Questioneers (Picture Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.9 4.9 out of 5 stars (6,926) |
| Dimensions | 9 x 0.63 x 11 inches |
| Edition | Illustrated |
| Grade level | Kindergarten - 2 |
| ISBN-10 | 1419708457 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1419708459 |
| Item Weight | 15.2 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 32 pages |
| Publication date | September 3, 2013 |
| Publisher | Harry N. Abrams |
| Reading age | 3 - 6 years, from customers |
T**R
LOVE.
I love this book. Let me repeat. I love this book and I loathe picture books. This is a book about the glory of failures, the importance of trying, and the necessity of believing in yourself. Rosie revels in inventing, building, and engineering, there's not a princess in sight. The writing has the lilt and flow of a Dr. Seuss book. The illustrations are beautifully done and capture the spirit of the characters perfectly. Rosie is a great book for girls probably from 2-6, The Girl loves it and we've already had to read it several times a day since she received it on Christmas Eve. Emotions of frustration of failure are turned to the triumph of failure in a way that children can relate to. There's enough silliness in the book (all of the inventions seem to involve cheese) to appeal to children, but not enough to make it intolerable to humbug adults like me. Great-great Aunt Rose teaches Rosie a fine lesson when her cheese-copter crashes after hovering for only a few moments. ""Your brilliant first flop was a raging success! Come on, let's get busy and on to the next!" She handed a notebook to Rosie Revere, who smiled at her aunt as it all became clear. Life might have failures, but this was not it. The only true failure can come if you quit." Great message for all children, but especially girls. It's easy to read with high enthusiasm and excitement. I've not read the original Iggy Peck, Architect but I may have to pick it up next time Little Miss Princess starts to rake on my nerves. Definitely, definitely check it out.
S**S
Super cute and inspiring story for young girls
Bought this as a birthday present for a 5 yr old girl. She absolutely loved it! Also read this with my old Pre-K class! It is an inspiring story about a young girl and her inventions. It teaches you to keep trying even when you fail and to follow your dreams. Highly recommend and will be buying this for my niece when the time is right.
C**E
5 Inspiring Stars
One of my favorite authors and the woman who inspires me to do my best daily read this book during her women's conference RISE. There wasn't a dry eye in the building by the time she finished reading it aloud, with many of us leaving the room admitting we were going to immediately find the book and purchase it. I don't have children yet, but I have a wonderful, amazing mother who just retired from her role as a Chemical Engineer for over 27 years. This book screamed Mother's Day gift to me and it was a hit, my mom cried while reading too. Andrea Beaty has written a children's novel for children and adults alike. It features an endearing character, Rosie, and her desperate hope of becoming an engineer. It's a whimsical tale told with lyrical words and gorgeous art. It's inspiring, moving, and might even be my favorite children's book I've ever read. Just don't tell Corduroy. I really appreciated that young Rosie has big dreams and even though the dream seems too big, it takes just one person and the perfect words to spark her spirit once again after a failure leads her to calling it quits. I absolutely recommend this children's short and will be purchasing it, and the other two books, for all future baby shower and kid's birthday gifts.
M**R
Best children's book I've read in years--and I've read hundreds
I received Iggy Peck Architect from a friend 3 years ago and have read it so many times my kids (now, seriously tired of it) know it by heart, as do I ("Young iggy peck is an architect and has been since he was two, when he built a great tower in only an hour with nothing but diapers and glue…"). A brilliant extension to that book (notice that on page 3 or 4, there is a picture of Iggy with his classmates, and Rosie is front row near the left), this book not only maintains that AMAZING writing (it is a pleasure to read aloud), but also grounds that narrative in a historical moment and figure (Rosie the Riveter). It is an immensely empowering story for girls that all sexes and ages will love. And, beyond the story and flow of the book, there are a few lines in the book that are just magical--worth of best sentences of the year (seriously). My recollection (I don't do reviews and don't have time to get the book--but Amazon asked for a review and here it is), is of two lines in particular. One is something like, "But thoughts are tricky, and some hold on tight, and this one kept Rosie awake through the night." (and I can't recall the other one, but it is on the same page where it describes Rosie's "obsession" with helping her aunt Rose check off the last box on her bucket list. I like this book so much--as a story of natural mentoring--that I read it aloud to a group of 250 youth mentoring professionals as a conference last month. This book is that good--probably may become a classic like Seuss or Sendak. If this author/illustrator team can create two or three more of these (based on those characters in Ms. Lila Greer's class at Blue River Creek elementary in grade two), this will be a set surely to be loved for generations. It is unlike most other children's book--like Sendak said when Colbert interviewed him, the only reason this is a children's book is because adults looked at it and called it such. For me, this is like poetry--I could read and re-read it several times a day and feel better afterward. Seriously!
P**L
I love this book. I have daughters - and I'm always encouraging that they can do anything they put their mind to. This is a great book to read to your kids.
R**A
Es un libro bellísimo. Las ilustraciones son lindas y el texto es precioso. Mis hijos de 8 y 5 lo disfrutan mucho. Lo único malo es que es difícil traducirle al español a los niños y hacer que rime tan bien como lo hace la autora. Valdría la pena comprarlo traducido para respetar las rimas.
M**E
Iggy Peck was a cool little kid and a pretty talented architect to boot, Rosie Revere would have a lot to live up to. And she does not disappoint. This is a lovely little tale that tells a strong message i.e it is better to try and fail, than to never try at all. Rosie is fascinated by the very male dominated world of engineering and is encouraged by her Grandmother- finally female lead characters that are not princesses! Hoorah! Like Iggy Peck (which i also highly recommend), this book is full of colouful and quirky illustrations. Every child (especially little girls) should have a copy of this book on their shelves.
J**O
I’ve given this as a present to other engineer friends who have kids and everyone loves it
J**O
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