2025.12.07 Wetenschapopwielen

Wetenschap op wielen

Auteur: Maria Rentetzi (rentetzi.de)
Illustrator: Pieter De Decker
Uitgeverij: Clavis

De Tweede Wereldoorlog eindigde met twee verwoestende Amerikaanse atoombommen op Hiroshima en Nagasaki. Maar tijdens de Koude Oorlog wilden de Verenigde Staten de wereld ervan overtuigen dat atoomenergie vrede en welvaart kon brengen. In 1958 schonken de Amerikanen twee blauwe laboratoria, die eruitzagen als bussen, aan het Internationaal Atoomenergieagentschap. Het doel was om wetenschappers overal op de planeet te leren hoe ze radio-isotopen konden gebruiken in de geneeskunde, de landbouw en de industrie. Nucleaire kennis naar verschillende continenten brengen bleek een uitdaging te zijn in een wereld vol economische ongelijkheid en hoop op vooruitgang.

Maria Rentetzi is professor in de wetenschappen, technologie en genderstudies aan de Friedrich Alexander University van Erlangen-Nuremberg in Duitsland.

Een prachtig geïllustreerd informatief boek over een onderbelicht stukje geschiedenis: twee mobiele laboratoria die wetenschappers over de hele wereld samenbrachten. Een wetenschappelijke roadtrip voor weetgierige lezers vanaf 9 jaar.

vanaf 9 jaar
25 x 26 cm – 40p
© maart 2025

Science Takes a Trip

Engelse versie voor de Canadese en Amerikaanse markt
25 x 26 cm – 40p
© augustus 2025

>> reviews

2025.08.18 ScienceTakesATrip cover

Editorial Reviews ‘Science takes a trip’

Kirkus Reviews

Rentetzi tells a lesser—known but inspiring story of science and politics. In 1958, the U.S. donated two mobile labs to the International Atomic Energy Agency to demonstrate how, in the wake of World War II, nuclear power could be used for good. The vehicles visited four continents, providing global scope to the project. From the book’s first spread, which refers to the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (and includes an image of a mushroom cloud), Rentetzi’s clear, concise text, translated from Dutch, explains the hope that the labs would allow scientists to make advances in agriculture, medicine, and industry. Scientists “with or without lab coats, with or without shoes” attended training sessions and applied what they’d learned to local challenges. De Decker’s precise, powerful line- and-color artwork  a mix of vignettes and full-page spreads, some recalling classic Northern European artdepicts people, landscapes, monuments, transport vehicles, local animals, and the inside of a science lab in the late 1950s. Details from the text are artistically integrated, like a world map and the painted flags that record the countries the mobile labs visited. While the tone is overall positive, Rentetzi acknowledges the complex political undercurrents of the project, noting that the U.S. government sought to make scientists around the world dependent on American technology, thus giving the U.S. an edge over the Soviet Union. An enthralling historical account.

Suzanne Costner, School Library Journal

“What visited 16 countries and trained 1,500 scientists from 1958 to 1965? The answer is two mobile laboratories donated to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) by the United States. This middle grade picture book tells a forgotten piece of history from the Cold War era. Readers learn that these buses were equipped with “a chemical laboratory and a radiation measurement chamber” and large enough to train six people at a time. Beautiful illustrations capture moments along the journey, such as one of the labs being lifted by crane onto a freighter, or a lab on the street in Southeast Asia being passed by bicycles and rickshaws. Some illustrations fill the entire spread, while others fill just one page, and the facing page holds text and several smaller images. Back matter includes photos from the IAEA archives and a brief synopsis of the program. There is also a QR code to access a video from the author about her research into the topic. This is a very useful book to include in social studies units on the Cold War and the early days of research into uses for nuclear energy.
VERDICT: Recommended for library collections and social studies classrooms.”

John Peters, Booklist

Rentetzi quickly contradicts her decidedly questionable opening claim that the motive behind President Dwight Eisenhower dispatching two rolling, bus—like nuclear labs on a world tour in 1958 was to show that “atomic energy could, first and foremost, be used for good” with a more realistic counterclaim that the exposure was intended to make other countries more dependent on American technology and so advance U.S. interests in the Cold War. Still, traveling over the next seven years under the auspices of the U.N.–associated International Atomic Energy Agency, the buses rolled through 16 countries in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America, “training” scientific visitors of many nationalities, “with or without lab coats, with or without shoes.” De Decker opens with an image of a mushroom cloud, but as the author retraces the tour’s course, the illustrator goes on to more peaceable, impressionistic views of the blue buses pulled up in distant locales urban and rural, or superimposed on a fragmentary map. There was at least an undercurrent of idealism in the venture, and modern readers in a better position to experience atomic energy’s less destructive uses will appreciate this historical vignette.

Kriebelt het om samen te werken?

Pieter maakt graag illustraties op maat van jouw verhaal!

Contact

Pieter De Decker is een veelzijdige illustrator, ontwerper en kunstenaar. Zijn werk omvat een breed scala aan projecten, waaronder illustraties, kunstintegratie in publieke ruimtes, lichtobjecten en theaterprojecten voor kinderen. Zijn illustraties stralen een levendige gelaagdheid uit die de kijker uitnodigt om steeds iets nieuws te ontdekken. Met een scherpe aandacht voor detail en een speelse benadering van kleur en vorm, weet Pieter sferen te scheppen die zowel jong als oud inspireren en verwonderen.

pieter@pieterdedecker.com

+32 498 37 54 06