Charlesbridge
Search for Books Home New Books Author Visits Downloadables Awards Classroom Materials
Features
Shopping Cart
No items in cart
View Cart
 

Unabridged The Charlesbridge Blog

August Contest image

Book of the Month: Can I Bring My Pterodactyl to School, Ms. Johnson?

Featured Downloadable: Activity Guide for Lola at the Library and Lola Loves Stories

Parents and Kids can read together! Parent Book: Through A Dog’s Eyes
Parents and Kids can read together! Children's Book: Looking Out for Sarah

Charlesbridge Recommendations for September 2010

Homework Helpers

Sign up for Charlesbridge Announcements

Read Past Newsletters

Fan us on Facebook
Visit us on MySpace
Follow us on Twitter

Pythagoras and the Ratios
Pythagoras and the Ratios
Illustrator: Phyllis Hornung Peacock   Author: Julie Ellis
Product Code: 
17769
ISBN: 
978-1-57091-776-9
Binding Information: Paperback 
Availability: 
In stock.
Price: $7.95
Qty:
Shop A Local Bookstore

A Math Adventure!

Julie Ellis and Phyllis Hornung Peacock team up once again to explore Pythagorean ratios in this humorous sequel to What's Your Angle, Pythagoras?

Pythagoras and his cousins want to win a music contest, but first they must figure out how to play their instruments in tune, something that's never been done before.

While trying to fix the problem, Pythagoras makes an important discovery--notes that sound pleasant together have a certain mathematical relationship. When Pythagoras applies this ratio to his cousins' pipes and lyres, the result is music to the ears.

This book is good for your brain because:
Mathematical problem solving, Ratios, Measuring, Musical Theory, History of Instruments







Download the cover image!




If you like this book, you'll love these:

  • What's Your Angle Pythagoras?
  • All Charlesbridge Math Adventures
  • Sir Cumference Math Series



  • Reviews
      Kirkus Reviews - December 1, 2009
    In ancient Greece, a young musician makes exciting discoveries. The boy Pythagoras, brimming with curiousity, steps up to help when his friend Octavius might be unable to compete in an upcoming musical contest. The problem is an awful noise coming from Octavius's new pipes. With a stylus, clay tablet, measuring cord and his sharp wits, mathematician-to-be Pythagoras figures out the relationship between pipe length and resultant sound and helps fashion a perfectly pitched set of pipes for Octavius. The lyres of his friends Amara and Reyna provide a more difficult challenge, one that Pythagoras solves (in a race against the clock) with scales and tiny rocks. He does it so successfully that he and his friends form Pythagoras and the Ratios...the first rock group! The book's educational aspects are fascinating--both the text and the acrylic-and-colored-pencil illustrations bring these to life--but it's flat-footed on the story's narrative aspects, both visually and textually. Helpful addenda provide interesting information on Pythagoras and the application of his ratios to music.
      School Library Journal - February 1, 2010
    This picture-book introduction to ratio and proportion also explains the connection between math and music through a story featuring young Pythagoras and his family. Preoccupied by mathematical problems, the protagonist is constantly in trouble with his parents for neglecting his chores. When his cousin Octavius offends everyone's ears with the dissonant pipes he is practicing for an upcoming music contest, the young mathematician hears a challenge. He measures his own set of melodious pipes, calculating the ratio of each pipe to the shortest one, and discovers that Octavius's pipes need to be shortened. Later, he tunes other cousins' lyres by attaching rocks to the strings to adjust the tension. With all the instruments finally ready, the cousins play together at the contest. Unfinished chores and a broken set of pipes leave Pythagoras out of the performance, but the end result is the first "rock" group, which is a big success. The story is amusing and offers a glimpse into life in ancient Greece. Acrylic and colored pencil cartoons depict the clothing and lifestyle of the period in a pleasing palette. A historical note and an experiment in which readers are challenged to use Pythagorean ratios to create a musical instrument with six glasses of water in varying amounts are appended.