San Francisco, CA (October 30, 2015)—World-renowned builder Yoshihito Isogawa believes his books should be like the LEGO brick—minimalist, colorful, and full of possibility.
In his new nearly-wordless releases from No Starch Press, The LEGO Power Functions Idea Books (No Starch Press, $24.95 each, 324 pp./328pp., October 2015), Isogawa shares hundreds of creative ways to build mechanisms with Power Functions, a widly popular LEGO TECHNIC system of electronic components. In these books, Power Functions gears, lights, motors, and control units are used to make sliding doors, walking robots, steerable tanks, and more, with each project encouraging readers to become inventive LEGO builders.
Isogawa's previous books have been praised as “invaluable” (BrickJournal), “fantastic” (Boing Boing), “minimalistic but highly informative” (Booklist), and “indispensable” (The NXT STEP Blog), and this two-volume set is a treasure trove of tiny but surprisingly elegant creations that millions of LEGO Power Functions owners will use for design inspiration.
The LEGO Power Functions Idea Books showcase small projects to build with LEGO TECHNIC gears, motors, and other moving elements that are depicted in vibrant, detailed photographs. Each model includes a list of required parts that guides readers through the build while exploring the principles of simple machines, gear systems, and power translation.
In Volume 1: Machines and Mechanisms, readers will build:
- Sliding doors
- Grasping claws
- Rack-and-pinion mechanisms
- Ball-shooting devices
In Volume 2: Cars and Contraptions, readers will build:
- Four-wheel drive cars
- Adorable walking bots
- Steerable tanks
- Robotic inchworms
- Cars that can drive on the edge of a table
Each of these volumes continues No Starch Press's tradition of publishing high-quality books that inspire readers of all ages to stretch the limits of their imagination and build creatively with LEGO. The LEGO Power Functions Idea Books are available now in fine bookstores everywhere.
—END—
Sample pages from The LEGO Power Functions Idea Book, Vol.1
Sample pages from The LEGO Power Functions Idea Book, Vol.2
About the Author
Yoshihito Isogawa is a LEGO luminary with 46 years of building experience. In addition to running Isogawa Studio, Inc., he regularly holds LEGO workshops, lectures at schools and science museums, and creates LEGO models for events and exhibitions. He is the author of the popular LEGO Technic Idea Book series (No Starch Press), as well as other Japanese-language LEGO titles.
You Might Also Be Interested In:
Available in fine bookstores everywhere, from http://www.oreilly.com/nostarch, or directly from No Starch Press: http://www.nostarch.com, [email protected], 1-800-420-7240.
About No Starch Press
No Starch Press has been publishing the finest in geek entertainment since 1994, covering topics like LEGO, hacking, science, math, and programming for all ages. Our titles have personality, our authors are passionate, and our books tackle topics that people care about.
About O'Reilly
O'Reilly Media spreads the knowledge of innovators through its books, online services, magazines, and conferences. Since 1978, O'Reilly Media has been a chronicler and catalyst of cutting-edge development, homing in on the technology trends that really matter and spurring their adoption by amplifying "faint signals" from the alpha geeks who are creating the future. An active participant in the technology community, the company has a long history of advocacy, meme-making, and evangelism.
# # #
O'Reilly is a registered trademark of O'Reilly Media, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
|