The Panama Canal

The Panama Canal The Story of How a Jungle Was Conquered and the World Made Smaller - Wonders of the World (Mikaya Paperback)

Hardback (04 Feb 2006)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Panama was less than 50 miles wide, yet difficult to bridge by canal -- its swamps were disease-ridden, its mountainous rain forest challenged the most brilliant engineers, and its oppressive heat exhausted the hardiest workers. Engineers found ways to cut through the forest, medical visionaries conquered the diseases, and workers endured the jungle. Yet there were also broken treaties, political tyranny, and the tragedy of thousands of West Indian workers forced to live in awful, segregated conditions.

"Wonders of the World" series

The winner of numerous awards, this series is renowned for Elizabeth Mann's ability to convey adventure and excitement while revealing technical information in engaging and easily understood language. The illustrations are lavishly realistic and accurate in detail but do not ignore the human element. Outstanding in the genre, these books are sure to bring even the most indifferent young reader into the worlds of history, geography, and architecture.

""One of the ten best non-fiction series for young readers."" - Booklist

Book information

ISBN: 9781613835883
Publisher: Perfection Learning
Imprint: Perfection Learning
Pub date:
DEWEY: 972.875
Language: English
Number of pages: 48
Weight: 454g
Height: 257mm
Width: 269mm
Spine width: 10mm