The author of Mesmerized shares another comical true tale of a
Founding Father using science to defeat ignorance and stop the spread of
false information.
Thomas Jefferson was wild about numbers. He was constantly counting,
measuring, and observing things that caught his interest. He loved
sharing his discoveries and reading the discoveries of others. But when
a famous Frenchman published a book about America, Jefferson was
appalled: all the information in the book was wrong. The author
insisted that America was a wretched, dismal place, where birds could
not sing, dogs could not bark, and everything and everyone was puny and
weak. Thomas Jefferson resolved to set the record straight -- with
numbers -- and prove to the world that the new nation was worthy of
investment. But how do you show that a country is plentiful in an age
when photography hasn't been invented yet? Mara Rockliff, master of
children's nonfiction, details another little-known moment in math and
natural history, illustrated with humor by prolific artist S. D.
Schindler and accompanied by extensive back matter and an informative
author's note.