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Honda: The Boy Who Dreamed of Cars

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List Price:
$17.95
Automotive Drive Price:
$12.21
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Manufacturer: Lee & Low Books
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Hardcover Dewey Decimal Number: 338.76292092 EAN: 9781600602467 ISBN: 1600602460 Label: Lee & Low Books Manufacturer: Lee & Low Books Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 32 Publication Date: 2008-09-01 Publisher: Lee & Low Books Reading Level: Ages 4-8 Studio: Lee & Low Books
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Editorial Reviews:
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One day in 1914 when Soichiro Honda was seven years old, an astonishing, moving dust cloud appeared in his small Japanese town. The cause was a leaky, noisy automobile--the first the boy had ever seen. At that moment Honda fell in love with cars, and a dream took hold. He would one day make them himself. It took Honda many years to reach his goal. Along the way he became an expert mechanic and manufacturer of car parts. After World War II he developed a motorized bicycle, the forerunner of his innovative motorcycles. Eventually Honda began manufacturing cars, first race cars and then consumer cars. Constantly seeking ways to make his products better than his competitors', Honda grew into a global industry leader. Soichiro Honda had an inventive mind and a passion for new ideas, and he never gave up on his dream. A legendary figure in the world of manufacturing, Honda is a dynamic symbol of lifelong determination, creativity, and the power of a dream.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Richie's Picks: HONDA: THE BOY WHO DREAMED OF CARS Comment: "A year later Honda took an important step toward making his dream come true. He began manufacturing the metal rings that surround pistons. These small steel cups in a car's engine move up and down quickly inside cylinders as they convert the energy in gasoline into the force that turns a car's wheels.
"Honda thought it would be easy to make piston rings, but his first ones were too rigid. They did not bend, and they cracked under stress. Ring after ring broke. So Honda went back to school to study metallurgy, the science of working with metal. Determined to figure out how to make his piston rings more flexible, Honda tried one technical approach after another. By 1940 his piston rings worked perfectly. He sold them to Toyota, one of Japan's first car companies."
As I demonstrate during so many booktalks at middle schools, picture books are not just for little kids. Given the level of sophistication needed to understand the technology and history illustrated in the above snippet, it is easy to recognize that HONDA: THE BOY WHO DREAMED OF CARS is a picture book that is far more age-appropriate for older readers.
In fact, every middle school would benefit from a copy of HONDA: THE BOY WHO DREAMED OF CARS, a well-researched 32-page picture book biography written by the author of the adult book, GIANTS OF JAPAN: THE LIVES OF JAPAN'S GREATEST MEN AND WOMEN. At this juncture in history, when the level of success attained by those who will develop the future of energy and transportation technologies could make or break the habitability of the planet for humanity, it is so vital that educators and parents catch the imagination of young people in the hope that some of our most talented young people opt for studying the applied sciences and grow up to become part of the planet's technology salvation.
HONDA: THE BOY WHO DREAMED OF CARS is just the sort of book that can help catch these imaginations. Amidst the incoming stacks of picture books, this one immediately caught my attention because, hey, I didn't know the first thing about Soichiro Honda, and I am very worried about energy problems and global warming.
Honda was born in a Japanese harbor town during the same year -- 1906 -- as the San Francisco earthquake. He (like me) was the oldest kid in the family. His father was a blacksmith, his mother a weaver. Honda was amazed at the age of seven when "a man drove a rumbling Model T through town," and that experience affected his life and, in turn, the world. Eventually, Soichiro Honda first became one of the world's premier manufacturers of motorcycles. Then, back when I was eight, during the year when JFK was assassinated and the Beatles were on the verge of their first foray to America, Honda achieved his lifelong dream: He began building cars.
The guy was a listener and an innovator, a determined guy who worked hard to find a better way of doing things. He collaborated with his young engineers to develop a radically new automobile engine called the Compound Vortex Controlled Combustion engine, or CVCC for short. (Take a look at those initials and you'll understand where he got the name for his most famous car.) When Civics arrived in America in 1972, they "were the first cars to meet the stricter emissions standards of the Clean Air Act passed by Congress." Then a gasoline shortage in 1973 caused many Americans to run out and buy Hondas because they were far more fuel efficient than American cars.
As the author concludes, "Many people today may never have heard of Soichiro Honda, but almost everyone knows his last name." Now Soichiro is dead, but his car company has spent decades putting GM to shame and his name lives on. Thanks to this excellent picture book for older readers, many young people will have the opportunity to learn about Mr. Honda and, hopefully, some will be inspired by his example to become innovators and entrepreneurs and might, themselves, become the topic someday of a picture book biography.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Rutgers University Project on Economics and Children Comment: Already as a young child, Soichiro Honda had an inquisitive mind, and he enjoyed standing in the harbor, with the majestic Mount Fuji in the background, observing boats in the harbor and wondering how they worked. One memorable day in 1914, young Honda saw the first car he had ever seen, a Ford Model T, and he was so enthralled with this mechanical wonder that he vowed to make a car himself when he was older. Honda's desire to learn about cars and his mechanical skills led him to find work at a garage in Tokyo. It took more than six years for him to work his way up from floor sweeper to a thoroughly-trained auto mechanic, but the experience proved invaluable in starting his own garage, and later, designing race cars.
Over the years, Honda's work included innovations in producing piston rings, airplane propellers, motorcycles, engines, and cars. He also started his own business, the Honda Motor Company, which competed against more established companies and grew into one of the world's largest car manufacturers. Although his temper in the workplace led to the nickname "Mr. Thunder," he offered his employees good salaries and benefits, and he was careful to listen to their suggestions for improvement.
This interesting book offers children a unique opportunity to learn more about the person behind the household name "Honda." Along the way, teachers and parents can use examples from Soichiro Honda's story to reinforce some useful lessons in economics related to entrepreneurship, innovation, and competition. Honda: The Boy Who Dreamed of Cars will appeal to readers who enjoy carefully-illustrated picture books that feature informative biographies of people we otherwise may not know much about.
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