Skip to product information
1 of 3

Dad, where does the Sun plug in?

Dad, where does the Sun plug in?

Regular price €14,95
Regular price Sale price €14,95
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale Sold out

Out of stock

Envío GRATIS desde 49 €

📢 Estás en buenas manos

  • 4,85/5 – 1300+ valoraciones
  • ❤️ 50.000 familias confían en nosotros
  • 🎂 10 años contigo
Like all children, Laura loves asking questions. So much so that for many nights she and her father, the science communicator Antonio Martínez Ron, played a game that consisted of answering her questions about the world before going to sleep. The questions were so fun and varied that one day they decided to write them down in a notebook to read in the future, when she was older. Later, they came up with the idea of ​​using them to make a book that other parents and other children could use to play the same game and ask more and better questions than hers. This is the result.
  • +6 years

More information

Authors: Antonio Martínez Ron / Laura Martínez LassoIllustrations: Kim AmatePages: 74Size: 23 x 19 cmBinding: HardcoverEditorial: CríticaISBN:9788498929881

Antonio Martínez Ron

He's a journalist and science communicator. He spends his days talking and writing about science, and sometimes he gets a little carried away with his work. He's appeared on TV conducting experiments and has written a serious book for this same publisher.

The naked eye

, in which he tells the story of the vision and the light. Although he snorts when Laura asks him questions, he's secretly delighted, especially with the ones he can't answer.

Laura Martínes Lasso

She's an extremely curious little girl. When she grows up, she wants to be a computer scientist, a teacher, and a singer. And an actress. And a gymnast. Well, and many other things, because her head is full of crazy ideas and she's eager to learn. She also loves playing volleyball, collecting minerals, writing stories, and dancing. And when the day is over, she still has the strength to stay awake a little longer and then get back to it. "Can I ask you a question, Dad?"

Warnings and precautions

Editorial

View full details