Judge The Golden Ratio by its cover. With this book, you will have done so rightly, for the book’s interior perfectly delivers what the stunning exterior promises: extraordinarily beautiful illustrations, interesting analysis, and entertaining instruction.Read More
Joy Hulme’s Wild Fibonacci: Nature's Secret Code Revealed is delightfully different from other books on the subject because Hulme does not merely describe animals’ body parts and shapes which resemble the Fibonacci Spiral, she focuses upon teaching the reader about how these specifically shaped body parts are helpful for ensuring the animals’ survival.Read More
Joy Hulme’s Wild Fibonacci: Nature's Secret Code Revealed is delightfully different from other books on the subject because Hulme does not merely describe animals’ body parts and shapes which resemble the Fibonacci Spiral, she focuses upon teaching the reader about how these specifically shaped body parts are helpful for ensuring the animals’ survival.Read More
Tom Robinson’s Fibonacci Zoo picture book quaintly explains how the Fibonacci zoo is different from most; in addition to the usual interesting zoo animals, the pattern of the quantities of them comprise the Fibonacci number sequence. Robinson succeeds in teaching young audiences about the mathematical concept in such a way that it invites them to...Read More
In A Mathematical History of the Golden Number, Roger Herz-Fischler traces the historical development of the Golden Number, also known as the divine proportion, or Division in Extreme and Mean Ratio, DEMR.Read More
Joseph D’Agnese portrays young Leonardo as a boy who daydreams about numbers; he also happens to be a genius, but he has humility, for he introduces himself with the nickname that is presumably what others may have cruelly called him.Read More
Dr. Keith Devlin is a 21st-century mathematician whose career treads a pathway parallel to that of the 13th-century mathematical genius, Master Leonardo Bigollo de Pisa, known as Fibonacci.Read More
Adopting the same whimsical manner as Leonardo Pisano himself, Dr. Keith Devlin numbers his chapters in The Man of Numbers: Fibonacci's Arithmetic Revolution beginning with 0 rather than 1. Thus, with this unexpected yet unobtrusive twist in composition (perhaps not even be noticed by some readers), Devlin introduces us to Leonardo Pisano, the humble mathematician...Read More
Alfred S. Posamentier and Ingmar Lehmann are enamored with the beauty of The Fabulous Fibonacci Numbers and they hope their readers will be also when they discover how powerful and relevant they are.Read More
While Bruce Gilson analyzes and emphasizes the properties, formulas, and applications of the generalized Fibonacci sequence in The Fibonacci Sequence and Beyond, he also covers other sequences (such as the Lucas sequence and geometric sequences) and addresses the relationships between them.Read More