
Lauren Ipsum
A Story About Computer Science and Other Improbable Things
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2014
Lexile Score
540
Reading Level
2-3
نویسنده
Carlos Buenoناشر
No Starch Pressشابک
9781593276577
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Starred review from February 1, 2015
A lost girl travels through a fantastical Alice in Wonderland-esque world filled with The Phantom Tollbooth-like computer-programming metaphors.After an argument with her mother, Lauren Ipsum goes for a walk through the woods. Quickly lost in Userland, she starts to encounter physical manifestations of computer science ideas, such as the Jargon creatures, seemingly benign at first but quickly revealed to be obnoxious. The various loony characters she encounters each champion different aspects of logic-specifically, the kinds of logic and perspectives used in programming and problem-solving-giving Lauren the tools she needs for her rambling journey home. While serving as an introduction to programming for kids, it avoids the nitty-gritty of code in favor of clever analogies that guide readers toward the type of thinking that will facilitate learning computer science. The extensive backmatter-a segment titled "The Field Guide to Userland"-details how Lauren's logic solves the various puzzles and how the solutions relate more practically to computer science, as well as providing jumping-off points for future subject exploration. The story is funny enough on its own, but the sly puns missed the first time around will keep the book fresh for those rereading after learning more programming. The intelligent female protagonist and casually multiethnic illustrations normalize inclusivity in computer science for young readers. Positive, smart, empowering philosophies and thinking skills couched in a wacky adventure. (Fantasy/philosophy. 8-14)
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grinch45 - I love Laurie Ipsum. I really like logic problems so I really liked reading about this book. My favorite problem is you have a wolf, a sheep, and broccoli and you want to take all to the other side. If you take the wolf and leave the sheep with the broccoli then the sheep would eat it but if you took the broccoli and left the sheep with the wolf then the wolf would eat the sheep. The way to solve that is you take the sheep then you go back and get the wolf and take it to the other side. Once you have got it to the other side you take the sheep back to the side you started at.Once you get there you drop of the sheep and take the broccoli to the other side. Then the last step is go get the sheep and take it to the other side. That is one reason why I like Lauren Ipsum.

May 15, 2015
Grades 4-7 Ideas are the real stuff of computer science, Bueno writes in his introduction to this computer-less computer-science book. His story of Lauren Ipsum navigating Userland teaches important scientific and programming concepts with logic puzzles, wordplay, and funny metaphors, without delving into the technical details. After an argument with her mother, Lauren runs into the woods, gets lost, and, like Milo in The Phantom Tollbooth and Alice in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, goes on a fantastical adventure through a strange landscape with confounding rules. To get home, Lauren must escape annoying Jargon creatures, fool officious (but ineffective) gatekeepers by guessing passwords, sail on the pirate ship Doppleganger through Probability Bay, and decode cryptic messages delivered by red-skinned mail daemons. The Field Guide at the end of the book connects Userland to the real world, giving in-depth information on how Lauren solves various puzzles. Although this is perfect for the budding scientist or programmer, any kid looking for a silly story will be entertained and might accidentally learn to use logic to test new ideas.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)
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