Kirilgan Seylerin Bilimi - Tae Keller File
Together, they turn the egg drop into an adventure. They sneak into a greenhouse, they ask uncomfortable questions, and they fail. A lot. Keller’s writing shines here because she allows the kids to be kids—obsessing over a silly school project—while simultaneously navigating adult-sized emotions. Here is the lesson that makes this book a modern classic: Not everything is meant to be saved.
The entire novel asks: What if the egg breaks? What if your mother doesn’t get better just because you won a contest? What if the orchid isn't magic? Kirilgan Seylerin Bilimi - Tae Keller
At first glance, this is a book about egg drops. The protagonist, Natalie, is a budding scientist whose teacher announces a new class competition: build a contraption that will keep an egg from cracking when dropped from a great height. Simple, right? But as any good scientist (or any hurting kid) will tell you, the surface is never the whole story. Natalie’s mother has stopped getting out of bed. She is battling a deep, unnamed depression that has turned their vibrant home into a quiet, careful place. Natalie’s father is trying his best, but he’s walking on eggshells (pun intended). The “science” in the title isn’t just about physics or botany; it’s Natalie’s way of trying to solve the unsolvable problem of her mother’s sadness. Together, they turn the egg drop into an adventure
She forms a hypothesis: If we win the egg drop competition, I can use the prize money to take Mom to see the miraculous Cobalt Orchids—a flower that blooms against all odds. And that will fix her. Keller’s writing shines here because she allows the
Growing Through Cracks: The Delicate Science of Hope in Tae Keller’s The Science of Breakable Things
Why this middle-grade novel is a must-read for anyone learning to heal. If you’ve ever felt like you were holding your breath, waiting for something to shatter, then Tae Keller’s The Science of Breakable Things is the hug—and the gentle nudge forward—you didn’t know you needed.