![]() ![]() Using this imaginative manner of turning on a child’s imagination while at the same teaching them something at the same time will allow them to remember it better. And to make sure everyone reading the book understands what they’ve been shown Captain Frankie once again asks questions about its readers have seen. However this time there’s no poetic description as the plane reaches each of its planned destination, instead we’re given information about what we’re looking at. ![]() ![]() Once again the book begins with showing the flags of the various places its readers will be taken to. In “The Seven Wonders of the World” its readers once again get to pretend they’re on a plane piloted by Captain Frankie who this time will take them to view these spectacular wonders from the sky but this time the wonders haven’t been made by Mother Nature they’ve been made by people, and once again those young individuals will learn something as they read this book. This is the last trip I’ll be taking with Captain Frankie and Angelic Airlines as I continue my break from reading/reviewing the slew of adult books I’ve done in the past two weeks. ![]()
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