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FLYING MACHINES by Alison Wilgus

FLYING MACHINES

How the Wright Brothers Soared

From the Science Comics series

by Alison Wilgus ; illustrated by Molly Brooks

Pub Date: May 23rd, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-62672-139-5
Publisher: First Second

In this entry in the Science Comics series, Katharine, the younger sister of Orville and Wilbur Wright, explains the science behind flight and how her brothers invented and flew the first successful airplane.

The Wright brothers were not the first to try to create flying machines, nor were they alone in their era in experimenting with them. In addition to chronicling their failures and successes, the narrative discusses the work of other pioneers in heavier than air flight, such as Otto and Gustav Lilienthal and Alphonse Pénaud. Scientific concepts including Newton’s laws of motion are clearly and concisely explained, as are technical components of the airplanes the Wright brothers invented and tested. Further innovations in flight are explained, ending with the invention of the jet engine. The text is informative and engagingly written, and the illustrations are colorful and appealing. A palette of brown, ocher, and blue-gray gives the graphic panels an appropriately antique feel. Unsurprisingly, they are almost exclusively populated by white people. Backmatter includes brief profiles of other aviation pioneers and a short biography of Katharine Wright. There is no bibliography or source notes and a surprising paucity of age-appropriate titles in the suggestions for further reading.

An accessible and engaging introduction to the Wright brothers and how they ushered in the age of flight.

(glossary, further reading) (Graphic nonfiction. 8-12)