"This wonderfully crafted beginner’s text on the brain, its neurons and its near magical abilities will help young readers and their parents learn about the body’s most valuable organ."
— Floyd Bloom, MD, former Editor-in-Chief of Science and Professor
Emeritus, The Scripps Research Institute
Neuron Galaxy is the illustrated story of a lonely little neuron who wants to connect with other neurons. The book will help children to understand the basic function of the brain and appreciate what a wonderful, amazing organ their own brain is — one of the most remarkable things in the galaxy!
The story starts with a small neuron and shows how it connects to other neurons, like shaking hands with a friend. Readers see the main parts of a neuron and understand how axons and dendrites branch out to form synaptic connections — all in language a child as young as five can understand.
As the neurons connect in networks, kids see how their own abilities grow. They realize that neurons and neural networks are what make their brain go. Neurons allow us to do everything from talking and thinking to dancing and remembering to breathing and drawing.
The story makes a graphic connection between the stars in the sky and nerve cells in our brain. There are as many neurons in our heads as there are stars in the Milky Way galaxy, and the book leaves readers with a sense of awe and wonder for the human brain equal to our awe and wonder for the universe.
All content has been vetted by a stellar panel of neuroscience advisers, including Floyd Bloom, MD (former Editor-in-Chief of Science) and Adam Gazzaley, MD, PhD, who does groundbreaking research at the University of California, San Francisco.
All ages, from five to ten to fifty to eighty, can learn about the brain and marvel at its powers by reading Neuron Galaxy.
"Neuron Galaxy is a beautifully composed journey, sure to stimulate any child’s enthusiasm to learn about their brain."
— Adam Gazzaley, MD, PhD, Professor of Neurology, Physiology and Psychiatry
Director, Neuroscience Imaging Center, University of California, San Francisco