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All creatures, in books both great and small
It's a jungle out there. Sometimes we forget that we are only one of countless species flying, swimming, tunneling and scurrying on the third rock from the sun. We still have no clear notion just how many creatures are endangered by the negligent stewardship of Homo sapiens, the currently dominant species of mammal. While biologists labor to identify the unknown animals and protect the known, authors and illustrators turn this feast of information into a golden age for children's nonfiction. Never before have young people had available so many beautiful, fact-filled books about our fellow creatures. There are more good new books about animals than we can possibly do justice to here, so we'll serve up only the cream of the crop. |
REVIEWS BY MICHAEL SIMS
The text expresses important concepts in clear and simple language, and the detailed watercolor illustrations are splendid.
By Cathryn Sill and illustrator John Sill Peachtree Publishers ISBN 1561452076
About Reptiles
About Mammals
About Birds
About Amphibians
By Kristin Joy Pratt-Serafini Dawn Publications, $7.95 ISBN 1584690178
Salmon Stream
By Marilyn Singer and illustrated by Anne Wertheim Holiday House, $16.95 ISBN 0823415473
Carol Lerner, who has written and illustrated many acclaimed nature books for children, has published On the Wing: American Birds in Migration. Her simplified illustrations draw readers into the fascinating story of the vast distances many birds fly each year to winter away from home. She addresses methods and goals of migration, differences in seasonal foods and the distinctive habits of certain birds.
By Carol Lerner HarperCollins, $16.95 ISBN 0688166490
Innovative Kids, $17.99 ISBN 1584760648
Night Sounds
Kids will find more stories about sharks in a book from venerable nature publisher Houghton Mifflin. Swimming with Hammerhead Sharks, by Kenneth Mallory, is the latest in the excellent Scientists in the Field series. These books give science a friendly human face by following -- and photographing -- particular scientists in their work among animals. They explain the need for specific information -- in the case of sharks, to combat the cinematic stereotypes -- and the methods scientists employ to study the animals. The author tells the story in first person and keeps it exciting and full of amazing discoveries. This fine series continues with Once a Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf, by Stephen R. Swinburne. This book tells the story of almost catastrophic depredations against the gray wolf, and how biologists have helped the wolf return to some poor semblance of its former glory. Also noteworthy is Sy Montgomery's The Snake Scientist, now in paperback. These fascinating creatures are literally followed into their burrows by scientists and schoolchildren.
By Kenneth Mallory Houghton Mifflin, $16 ISBN 0618055436
Once a Wolf: How Wildlife Biologists Fought to Bring Back the Gray Wolf
The Snake Scientist
The Oxford First Book of Animals, by Barbara Taylor, addresses animal themes, but also covers habitats, from deserts to oceans. Sidebars titled Look Closer provide more details, and the book ends with a fun Animal Detective Quiz. Children from preschool through the first few years of school will enjoy both the preceding books.
By Barbara Taylor Oxford, $18.95 ISBN 0195216873
By David Burnie DK, $16.95 ISBN 0789468956
Ocean Watch
Animal Watch
Michael Sims is currently writing a natural and cultural history of the human body for Viking.
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