Thomas Jefferson’s Battle for Science: Bias, Truth, and a Mighty Moose!

THOMAS JEFFERSONS BATTLE for SCIENCE FC 1P JUNE 28 2023Thomas Jefferson’s Battle for Science: Bias, Truth, and a Mighty Moose! 

Illustrated by Jeremy Holmes

Did you know Thomas Jefferson, one of the most famous founding fathers, always had his mind on science? This STEM/STEAM picture book tells how Jefferson’s scientific thinking and method battled against faulty facts and bias to prove that his new nation was just as good as any in the Old World.

Young Thomas Jefferson loved to measure the natural world: plants and animals, mountains and streams, crops and weather. With a notepad in his pocket, he constantly examined, experimented, and explored. He dreamed of making great discoveries like the well-known scientific author, Count Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon.

But when Buffon published an encyclopedia of the natural world, Jefferson was furious! According to the French count, America was cold and swampy, and filled with small and boring animals, nothing like the majestic creatures of the OId World. Jefferson knew Buffon had never even been to America. Where had Buffon gotten his information? Had he cherry-picked the facts to suit his arguments? Was he biased in favor of Europe?

How could Jefferson prove Buffon wrong? By using scientific inquiry, of course! This first picture book to emphasize Jefferson’s use of scientific methods is an accessible and entertaining approach to a lesser-known side of Jefferson.

video visit thumbnail

RESOURCES FOR EDUCATORS 

EDUCATOR GUIDE download

INTRO to the BOOK video

 
 
 
 
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
 
Hardcover $18.99
Published by Calkins Creek/Astra Books for Young Readers
May 14, 2024 – ISBN 9781635926200 | 7-10 years
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~

REVIEWS

Booklist_StarReview_badge “With theatrical flair, Anderson and Holmes lay out a historical contretemps between Jefferson, who took “supreme delight” in science and was an eager observer of the natural world, and renowned French naturalist Buffon…The illustrator underscores the narrative’s droll, punchy tone by pinning cartoon figures in period dress, images of wildlife, leaf, and bone specimens with handwritten labels, and sheets and scraps with quotes on ruled or raw wooden backgrounds for an untidy scrapbook effect…readers will come away knowing more about the multifaceted character of the man who…became our third president.”  ~ Booklist 

⭐️ “Anderson cleverly juxtaposes Buffon’s faulty scientific claims alongside Jefferson’s colorful outrage… Holmes wittily presents Jefferson’s inquiries through comic-book panels depicting heads exploding with arguments set against sepia-colored notebook pages…A delightfully enlightening account and a welcome antidote to our own time’s precarious truthiness.”    ~ Kirkus

AND…15 Best May Books for Young Readers from Kirkus 😍

⭐️ “The written narrative appears in text boxes, acting either as previews for the often-humorous illustrations (for example, ideas explode from Jefferson’s head as he writes his own book challenging Buffon) or as comic panels. A concluding author’s note explains the sources and dangers of misinformation and ways to identify and combat such rumors, as well as a timeline of Jefferson’s life and a bibliography—appropriately, for the topic—divided into primary and secondary sources.” ~ Horn Book

HONORS:

The 25 Best New Book Releases This Week from Parade Magazine “…features marvelously detailed and inventive illustrations showing how the Founding Father used the scientific method to refute a French scientist’s dismissive attitude towards the New World. Great fun.”

Museum of the American Revolution: Read the Revolution 2024 Summer Reading List for Young Readers

INTERVIEWS, BLOG ARTICLES AND MORE!

Unpacking the Power of Picture Books: Interview and review

Carol Baldwin’s Blog review

Blog review on Cathy Ogren’s blog Humor Me

Writing and Illustrating from Kathy Temean: review and the book journey

The Picture Book Buzz blog: interview with Maria Marshall

Mary Boone’s 6 Questions blog

Writing and Illustrating: Illustrator Saturday with Jeremy Holmes 

The GROG Blog: Illustration Notes [To note? Or not to note?]