Book Description
for Johann Gutenberg and the Amazing Printing Press by Bruce Koscielniak
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
A straightforward, visually detailed account of the history of modern printing begins with a brief account of important early advances by the Chinese, and later the Koreans. Then author/artist Bruce Koscielniak focuses on Europe in the Middle Ages, where a learning revival led to a demand for books, and experiments with metal type in Italy, Holland, and Germany coincided with the work of monastic scribes (“We make haste—slowly,” comments a monk in one illustration). Koscielniak’s appealing presentation shows and tells how a book was made and bound before it launches into how Gutenberg’s printing press revolutionized bookmaking and made the printed word more widely available and affordable (although books were certainly not available and affordable to everyone as the text proclaims). Ironically, Gutenberg’s printing shop went out of business when he couldn’t repay his debt, but hundreds more opened as his technology was replicated. Small detail illustrations, many with informational captions, and full-page scenes illustrate the text of this handsomely designed, informative volume. (Ages 8–11)
CCBC Choices 2004 . © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2004. Used with permission.