Cover Image: What's Where on Earth?

What's Where on Earth?

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Member Reviews

What a fabulous reference book this is for children. It contains so much information, and to be honest, given that I am geographically challenged, there was a lot of the content that I didn’t know either!!
Vibrant and colourful pictures are included in abundance that draw your eyes to read page after page.
This is so much more than just an atlas, and I definitely recommend it.
My thanks to NetGalley, the publisher and the author for allowing me to read this book in return for an honest review.

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My daughter loved this book. We both really enjoyed all the information and the images throughout and how this book is set out. I think it will be brilliant as a hard copy. Thank you for the opportunity to read this book.

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Where are all my non-fiction lovers? This is the ultimate Atlas, the Atlas of all Atlases. Containing 60 unique maps of the world plotting everything from migration to tallest buildings, you’ll never need another Atlas again!


This is perfect for visual learners and provides an understanding of what’s where in the world at a very quick glance. The illustrations and photos are gorgeous and the diagrams are clear and informative.

It’s the world as you’ve never seen it before! It’s the world in the clearest format you have ever seen it!

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Again, unfortunately a bit too grown up for my daughter but this book is literally perfect for when they start doing proper topics at school and learning about the world around them.
This covers so many different things I can see this being a go to book once we get to that stage.
Easy to understand with the pictures too.

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Why buy one map for the school library when you can have so many more? The ocean floor is mapped, the hurricanes and cyclones tracked, the snowfall measured and the most venomous creatures located. Hotspots for biodiversity, the trans-Atlantic connections pandemics have made (oh how topical...), and the balance on the planet's surface of over- and under-nutrition rates – so much of this is perfectly suitable for geography and social science. It's a book that has but one focus, and one view (a view that mentions Antarctica often but dumps it off the page for a scrolling factoid) - but still manages to make every page distinctive, relevant and in the finish quite memorable. A bit too quaint perhaps when mentioning TV consumption, and a bit too woke when whingeing needlessly about colonialism, it still could open many an eye to the world's imbalances and interconnectedness and all the issues therefrom. Four and a half stars.

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