Grampie
True Home Stories from the Life of
Alexander Graham Bell By Carol Lauritzen and Laurel Mathewson
8.25 x 10.75
laminated hardcover 52 pages 17 black-and-white images ISBN: 978-1-946970-91-6 First Edition: July 2, 2019 $18.00 Published by Wake-Robin Press An imprint of redbat books La Grande, OR 97850 Book Design by redbat design |
Alexander Graham Bell is one of North America’s most famous inventors. Although he is best known for the telephone, he started his science experiments because he wanted to help people who were deaf. He also spent his life exploring metal detectors, iron lungs, kites and speed boats. Have you ever wondered … What it would have been like to actually live with and learn from Alexander Graham Bell? What was he like as a father and grandfather, not just a public figure?
Grampie offers a glimpse into this side of Bell’s life and legacy, inviting us to ponder the question Bell answered throughout his life as a parent and grandparent: What does it look like to lovingly cultivate scientific curiosity at home?
Grampie offers a glimpse into this side of Bell’s life and legacy, inviting us to ponder the question Bell answered throughout his life as a parent and grandparent: What does it look like to lovingly cultivate scientific curiosity at home?
About the Authors
Carol Lauritzen and Laurel Mathewson were looking for information about the science experiments Bell developed for household use for potential educational purposes. To their surprise and delight, Bell’s “Home Notes” and family letters revealed much more: a rich and tender domestic world, filled with a devotion to growth and learning that went beyond simple experiments. Carol is a retired professor of education who fostered love of learning in countless teachers and students in addition to her two grown sons. Laurel is an Episcopal priest and writer who tries to pass on her own mother’s love of scientific observation to her two young children.