This sophisticated series targets mature, knowledgeable readers, and some topics aren't within the scope of the high school curriculum. Purchase where needed.
Keep Lionel Bender's Invention (DK, 2013), and skip this title.
A useful resource, ideal for health class reports.
An urgent call to action, supported with detailed endnotes and a substantial bibliography.

A well-designed, impeccably researched work.—
Mary Mueller, Rolla Public Schools, MO
Scientist or huckster? During the early twentieth century, Charles Mallory Hatfield claimed that he could coax rain from the sky. His services were offered to drought-plagued cities at the price of up to $1000 per inch of rain, and his success rate was remarkable. (His younger brother, Paul, and his self-appointed "promoter" Fred Binney ran the business side, leaving Charles to focus on his "secret chemical" concoction.) In December 1915, the San Diego city council contacted Hatfield, who promised to fill the Morena Reservoir—ten billion gallons!—within a year. The next month it started to pour: flooding the city, destroying roads and bridges, and sweeping away homes. Brimner's well-paced account begins with Hatfield on New Year's Day in 1916, secreted away at his camp near San Diego having just accepted the city's challenge ("wearing a fedora and carrying a rifle…patrolling the fence, intent on keeping unwanted visitors at a distance"). Brimner then goes back to describe Hatfield's early life and provide a bit on the history of pluviculture ("the art of making it rain") and the people—mostly shysters
A coming-of-age story that will expand graphic novel collections with its incorporation of the historical oppression, community empowerment, and identities of marginalized communities in 1970s New York City.

An insightful and thought-provoking work.
A valuable choice for visual learners or students in need of additional instruction.
A solid addition to most collections.
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