100000 WHYS - Children Encyclopedia
A fun and engaging encyclopedia that answers children's biggest "why" questions while inspiring curiosity, critical thinking, and a lifelong love of learning.
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Estimated Delivery:Jul 06 - Jul 10
🌏 Free Worldwide Shipping on orders over $39.99
🔥 It's been recommended by 13.92K people on Facebook
The questions your child is already asking - why do we fart,why is the sky blue, why do we dream, why can parrots talk,why do apples turn brown - answered in plain language with vivid illustrations they'll actually look at
500+ questions across 6 worlds: the human body, animals,plants, space, earth, and everyday life - so every "why" findsa home
1-2 pages per topic - no walls of text. Built for the child whocan't sit still and the parent who only has 15 minutes
Full-color comic illustrations throughout - the kind children open without being asked, and adults stop to read over their shoulder
Written for ages 3-12 - simple enough for early readers,interesting enough that parents and grandparents consistently say they learned something too
Global Shipping Area Specifications
We provide reliable shipping services to the following countries:
United States I Canada I Australia I Germany I France I Belgium I Ireland I Netherlands I United Kingdom I The United Arab Emirates I New Zealand
Buy 3 Get 1 Free Shipping Worldwide.
Once your items is dispatched, the estimated deliverytime is:
- US: 5-7 business days
- UK: 5-10 business days
- Australia: 5-10 business days
- Canada: 5-10 business days
- Europe: 5-10 business days
- Rest of World: 7-10 business days
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100000 WHYS - Children Encyclopedia
Your child is already asking theright questions. Someoneshould actually answer them.
Why do we dream? Why is fire hot? Why can't we tickle ourselves? Why do planesstay in the sky?
Most get "I don't know" or a Google answer read off a phone. Their curiosity fires -and then quietly dims.
Ages 5 to 12 are the window. Miss it, and the questions stop coming - replaced bypassive scrolling and half-attention.
Just 15 minutes a day is enough to build the kind of curious, independent thinkerthat stands out in every classroom
The difference between children who grow up fascinated by the world and thosewho don't isn't intelligence. It's whether someone gave them the answers whilethey were still asking.
Curiosity doesn't wait. Neither does the algorithm.
Every day a child spends passively watching instead of actively asking is a daythe curiosity habit gets a little weaker.
This isn't a book you assign them. It's one they pick up themselves - becausethe questions inside are the exact ones already bouncing around in theirhead.
Parents who get this early don't have to fight for their child's attention later.
The habit is already there.