Reviews for The big book of treasures : the most amazing discoveries ever made and still to be made

Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* Anyone who enjoys thrilling treasure-hunting stories and the lure of hidden riches will love the 23 true tales in this generously illustrated book for kids. The stories center around legendary treasures: ones that treasure hunters have long been searching for, that explorers have found, or thieves have stolen and lost. Many still haven't been found, and may never be, but that doesn't stop people from looking, as evidenced in many of these stories. Some young readers may know about King Tut's tomb or recognize the Ark of the Covenant from Raiders of the Lost Ark. Other stories will be less familiar, such as the tale of a bank heist pulled off in Germany in 1929 by two brothers who tunneled into the bank. The loot they nabbed has never been found, but amateur treasure hunters continue to search for it. The value of the treasure from some of the vaults of a more than 2,000-year-old Hindu temple opened in 2011 is estimated at $22 billion. Though some source notes would have been welcome, the lively, engaging, full-bleed illustrations, reminiscent of Ingri and Edgar D'Aulaire's artwork, add much to this exciting and high-interest book.--Rawlins, Sharon Copyright 2017 Booklist


School Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 4-8-In his debut children's book, German soccer journalist Honigstein tackles a different kind of field: anthropology. His study presents 23 "treasures"-cultural discoveries and literal riches-from around the world. Though mostly Eurocentric in its portrayal of history (claims of Columbus "discovering America" the most obvious example), the book highlights a broad swath of curiosities. Readers will learn about golden relics like the Fabergé eggs or the Ark of the Covenant; sunken ships like the Whydah Gally or the Nuestra Señora de Atocha; and other artifacts like the Archaeopteryx and Qin Shi Huang's Terra Cotta Army. Each section ends with a description of where the curiosities are now, as well as a call to action to discover those that have yet to be found. The book is beautifully designed, but the stylized font can be hard to read against Attia's more detailed backgrounds. In general, the mid-century-inspired illustrations-done in almost entirely full-color spreads-are bright and attractive and lend a storybook element to the informational text. The text reads like a junior version of Atlas Obscura-delightful, quirky, and sure to ignite the treasure hunter in all. However, this title lacks a bibliography, primary sources, and other textual elements to give a bit more weight to the wonder. VERDICT More coffee table than library shelf, this is best suited for larger collections or the personal libraries of treasure aficionados.-Alec Chunn, Eugene Public Library, OR © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Twenty-three tales of treasures hidden, long-lost, or still lostfrom the Lascaux cave paintings to fabled El Dorado.Though golden troves predominateled by the treasure chambers beneath the Hindu temple of Padmanabhaswamy, said to contain centuries of precious gifts valued in the multibillion-dollar rangethe glittering tally includes cultural prizes too. These include the Rosetta Stone, the Ark of the Covenant, and the sumptuous (and peripatetic) Amber Room that disappeared from Berlin's City Palace at the end of World War II. With occasional bouts of giddiness likely inspired by all the riches on virtual display (the ancient Jews wandered for 40 years because "they did not have a good satnav, unfortunately"), Honigstein genially describes shipwrecks and other historical calamities, legends, quests, archaeological discoveries, and the treasures themselves with reasonable exactitude. The narrative's hand-lettered-style typeface (called "Thirsty Rough") is sometimes printed over dark or multicolored backgrounds, which creates legibility issues, and a few factual or translation errors do creep in (no, Darwin did not claim that humans descended from apes). Also, though Attia's fanciful cartoon images and reconstructions nicely reflect the author's light tone, she illustrates the wrong specimen of Archaeopteryx, and her human figures have a certain sameness to them. There may be some rough edges, but the unusually broad definition of "treasure" may move a few readers off the gold standard. (Nonfiction. 10-13) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Treasure hunts aren't just the stuff of legend: Homigstein presents 23 stories of real-life riches lost and found (most of the time) and those who have tirelessly sought them out. Among them are archaeological and paleontological discoveries including the tomb of Tutankhamun and the fossilized remains of an Archaeopteryx, biblical objects such as the original menorah, and precious cargo lost at sea. Some plunders-including a 1929 haul taken by the Sass brothers, two German bank robbers-have never been found. The theft of the 1966 World Cup trophy, meanwhile, concluded with its recovery by a collie named Pickles. Though the small italic type isn't always easy to read, especially set against Attia's playful full-page graphics, these varied stories of theft and discovery should pique readers' imaginations. Ages 8-12. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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