Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
The fourth book in the Gizmo Girl series encourages creative thinking while tackling the ideas of diversity and inclusion. Everyone’s favourite second grader is back with an all-new invention sure to wow her classmates! Geraldine’s latest mission is to unite her class in celebration of their unique differences. When she sees the kids at recess giving the new kid from Pakistan a hard time for being different, she decides it is time for a new invention to help support her new friend. Sorting through her parents’ old gadgets and gizmos, she finds exactly what she needs to create the perfect rainbow machine. A spin of the rainbow machine blends all the colours to illustrate the idea of inclusivity.
Enthusiasm and imagination go hand in hand as readers learn that science can be found everywhere, and you can be an inventor by simply using everyday objects. Award-winning author of the Gizmo Girl series, Sol Regwan, hopes young readers will identify with Geraldine as problem solver, born leader, and someone they would like to have as a friend. AGES: 4 to 8 AUTHOR: Sol Regwan is an optometrist who loves to write. He is the author of the Gizmo Girl series and has authored two other successful children’s books. Sol lives in Tarzana, California. Denise Muzzio spent her early childhood drawing and surrounded by books. When she grew up, she decided to study graphic design, illustration, and animation to keep that inner child alive. SELLING POINTS: . The fourth book in the Gizmo Girl series encourages creative thinking while tackling diversity and inclusion as Geraldine supports the new kid in class . STEM-minded girls and boys will learn important facts about inventions and that science can be found everywhere . A spin of Geraldine’s new invention blends all the colours of the class together, illustrating that it doesn’t matter what their differences are when they all work together
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
The fourth book in the Gizmo Girl series encourages creative thinking while tackling the ideas of diversity and inclusion. Everyone’s favourite second grader is back with an all-new invention sure to wow her classmates! Geraldine’s latest mission is to unite her class in celebration of their unique differences. When she sees the kids at recess giving the new kid from Pakistan a hard time for being different, she decides it is time for a new invention to help support her new friend. Sorting through her parents’ old gadgets and gizmos, she finds exactly what she needs to create the perfect rainbow machine. A spin of the rainbow machine blends all the colours to illustrate the idea of inclusivity.
Enthusiasm and imagination go hand in hand as readers learn that science can be found everywhere, and you can be an inventor by simply using everyday objects. Award-winning author of the Gizmo Girl series, Sol Regwan, hopes young readers will identify with Geraldine as problem solver, born leader, and someone they would like to have as a friend. AGES: 4 to 8 AUTHOR: Sol Regwan is an optometrist who loves to write. He is the author of the Gizmo Girl series and has authored two other successful children’s books. Sol lives in Tarzana, California. Denise Muzzio spent her early childhood drawing and surrounded by books. When she grew up, she decided to study graphic design, illustration, and animation to keep that inner child alive. SELLING POINTS: . The fourth book in the Gizmo Girl series encourages creative thinking while tackling diversity and inclusion as Geraldine supports the new kid in class . STEM-minded girls and boys will learn important facts about inventions and that science can be found everywhere . A spin of Geraldine’s new invention blends all the colours of the class together, illustrating that it doesn’t matter what their differences are when they all work together