1 Your mighty brain
2 Control room
3 Making sense of the world
4 Making non-sense of the world
5 Who am 1?
6 See inside someone else's head
7 When brains go wrong
8 Seeing inside
9 Try it yourself
Alex Frith (Author)
Alex Frith has been writing Usborne books since 2005. His diverse
output covers such titles as 'See inside Your Head', 'Stories of
Thor' and 'Politics for Beginners'. He has spoken at multiple
festivals about his book '100 Things to Know About Space'. Alex can
be found in London.
An interactive lift-the-flap book with quirky ‘lemming’ style
characters that delves inside the remarkable goings-on of the human
brain.
*Junior Education Plus*
Simple explanations and clear illustrations make even complex
processes like memory accessible.
*Good Book Guide*
Anyone who has ever wondered what goes on inside their brainbox
will be fascinated by See Inside Your Head from Alex Frith and
Colin King. Packed with more than 80 flaps to peer under, the most
reassuring sentence is that there are so many things to see in our
world we need to ignore most of it or risk going crazy. Now there’s
a good excuse – along with the fact that you can improve your
skills just by thinking about them.
Find out such things as why the boy with the plastic leg still
feels an itch in his foot and why your brain doesn’t always work
properly first thing in the morning. There’s a whole raft of things
you never knew you wanted to know. Intended for the eights-plus,
this is a book for the whole family.
*Newbury Weekly News*
An utterly incredible book, fantastically illustrated (as you'd
expect from Usborne) and with quite a broad appeal to a wide age
range, a book that will be a valuable resource for your budding
biologists to dip into.
*Read it Daddy*
Filled with flaps and masses of mindbending 'proper' psychology. My
three-year-old son and I loved it.
*Psychologist magazine*
Children are fascinated by what is inside their heads, and this
wonderful book by Usborne is packed with facts about the brain.
What makes up the brain? What does the brain do and how does it
help us make sense of our world? For example, how does the brain
make us think a ventriloquist’s dummy is speaking? What happens
when the brain goes wrong, such as when someone gets Alzheimer’s
disease? The colourful illustrations and flaps that hide pictures
and facts keep the small reader interested and I would venture that
most adults will learn a lot of new things reading this book.
*Professor Essi Viding*
The great thing about a book like See Inside Your Head is that it
covers how the brain and our emotions work – fascinating stuff that
children will hold a natural curiosity for.
*Junior Education Plus*
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