<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"Lucy learns all about states of matter, and a school field trip and the Fall Harvest Festival gives her the chance to put her knew knowledge to good use"--<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Autumn has arrived, and at Granite City Elementary School everyone is gearing up for the biggest and best event of the year, the Harvest Festival. The whole school is excited about the games, the contests, the food, and most of all--the costumes! Everyone except Lucy. She doesn't like dressing up, and has no desire to be a fairy princess or rock star, even for one day. <p/>But Lucy is excited about the new science unit Miss Flippo has started: the states of matter. Lucy and her friends understand solids and liquids. They're easy. But gasses are more difficult to grasp. <p/>When the class goes on a field trip to an orchard and Stewart Swinefest eats too many apples, and gets a serious stomachache, Lucy suddenly understands that even if you can't see gasses they can fill space and expand, and even make you move. <p/>And with Stewart feeling better, she has a really great idea for her Harvest Festival costume, too. <p/>The second book in a new chapter book series from IRA Children's Book Award-winner, Michelle Houts, <i>Solids, Liquids, Guess Who's Got Gas</i> draws on STEM themes and is aligned with curriculum guidelines to bring a love of science to young readers, inspiring them to start their own labs and explore their world.<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Michelle Houts</b> is the award-winning author of several middle-grade novels, picture books, and biographies for young readers including <i>Winterfrost</i>, which was a 2014 Bank Street Best Book and Junior Library Guild selection, and <i>The Beef Princess of Practical County</i>, which was awarded the 2010 IRA Children's Book Award. She lives, works, and plays on a farm in western Ohio, where she is restoring a one-room schoolhouse. While in second grade, she begged her parents for a chemistry kit but wasn't quite sure what to do when she actually got it. Lucy's Lab allows her to be the scientist she always wanted to be. <p/><b>Elizabeth Zechel</b> is an illustrator and author of the children's book <i>Is There a Mouse in the Baby's Room?</i> Her illustrations appear in books such as <i>Wordbirds</i> by Liesl Schillinger, <i>The Little General and the Giant Snowflake</i> by Matthea Harvey, and cookbooks such as <i>Bubby's Homemade Pies</i> by Jen Bervin and Ron Silver, as well as a variety of magazine and literary journals. She lives in Brooklyn, New York where she teaches Kindergarten.
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