How many times did the United States test atomic bombs? Where did they test them? What did the explosions look like? As Passages’ Living Environment curriculum gets underway and students consider the atom, librarians may supplement instruction with this stunning and disturbing pictorial documenting the testing of nuclear bombs first on the mainland and subsequently on unlucky islands. Author Michael Light keeps the text to a bare minimum for much of the book, allowing the reader’s curiosity to be piqued and then extended as the images of explosions pile up. The backmatter reveals Light’s well-researched captions as well as a powerfully succinct timeline of the progression of the development of atomic bombs and key events of World War II. Notes on stockpiling highlight the escalation of the arms race between the U.S. and the former U.S.S.R. Struggling readers will appreciate the chance to access the text via the reading of images, and more sophisticated readers may enjoy the initial mystery of the buried captions and will find much to chew on once the backmatter is uncovered. --Jessica Fenster-Sparber
Light, Michael. 100 Suns. New York: Knopf, 2003. Print.
Click here for an interview with Michael Light on 100 Suns which was published in afterimage's July/August 2005 issue.