Public Book
Christine and The Magic Charts
Story for Kids
by Alex Kolokolov, Natalia Kiseleva, Anastasiya Lykova
About the Book
Where charts come alive, and your child starts seeing the story behind every number. Schoolgirl Christine steps into a magical world of data — where charts become real:Piechi, a cheerful pie chart puppy Barney the Barchart, tall and full of energy Lainie, a flexible and beautiful line chart These creatures thrive on data, and Christine discovers their superpowers. Together, they meet other inhabitants of this world and overcome challenges to find and rescue Christine's dad, locked in the Tower of Tables...
We wrote it for parents in tech and data fields—to help you share your world with your child, start fun conversations, and plant the seeds of analytical thinking through play. Parents, beware! After this adventure, your child might start drawing infographics about their daily activities, visualizing family stories, or analyzing their own spending.
Book details
Confirmed Reader Feedback
3 confirmed reader reviews.
engaging for both my kids (8 &12)
I got this book for my younger child (8), but even my 12 yo flipped through it. The main focus is data literacy, but told as an adventure where Christine must rescue her dad from the Tower of Tables. I am not sure why, but that rescue mission gives the story real heart .
An unique adventure
This book is incredibly engaging and relevant! We got it for my younger sons, but even my oldest 16-year-old found it interesting enough to flip through. The illustrations are fantastic, and the storyline is captivating. The original approach to organizing data makes this book truly unique and helpful. Huge thanks to authors!
Great read for maths loving kids
This book is such a fun read. It introduces young kids to charts, bar graphs, and line graphs, but without making it boring for them. The authors have designed a beautiful book, and the story flows smoothly. Each page is interesting as Christine tries to rescue her father from the world of data. If you want your child to learn about graphs, data, and statistics, this is probably the book you need. At the end, the authors also explain each form of graph, which I felt was a good addition to the book.









