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PLANTOPEDIA

More science-y than scientific, this encyclopedic effort is ideal for quiet browsing and family sharing.

Emulating its predecessor Creaturepedia (2015) in format and whimsy, Barman’s latest exerts a quirky organization upon more than 600 plants.

In 49 alphabetically arranged sections of three to six pages each, plants are grouped by color, size, habitat, and even smell. “The Confused Fruits”—cucumber, eggplant, and zucchini among them—“think they’re vegetables” (each contains seeds, a characteristic of fruit). Illustrating “The Healers,” people in medieval clothing proffer branches of Saint-John’s-wort (for “mild depression”) or sip lemon-balm tea (for calming nerves). “The Old Timers” groups trees known for their longevity—olive, ginkgo, giant sequoia—inserting tortoises, dinosaurs, and crocs for fun. With a few exceptions (echinacea, for instance) the plants are identified by their common names. The sparse text offers facts, lore, and brief definitions. The focus here is on Barman’s wry, bright, inventive digital compositions, which yield both a stylized fidelity to plant forms and goofy visual jokes. “Garden vegetables” depicts root, leaf, and seed crops along with a mole gleefully terrifying nearby earthworms. With the exception of several ancient Egyptians, two brown-skinned people sniffing fragrant blossoms, and three brown hands reaching toward “prickly” plants, the cartoonish humans appear to be white. There’s little regard for scale or specifically discrete geographical habitats—but that’s not Barman’s intention. In the appendix of leaf shapes, information about the margins and veins of leaves appears, bafflingly, to be missing.

More science-y than scientific, this encyclopedic effort is ideal for quiet browsing and family sharing. (contents, index) (Nonfiction. 5-8)

Pub Date: May 3, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-78603-139-6

Page Count: 200

Publisher: Wide Eyed Editions

Review Posted Online: April 24, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2018

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THE WONDERFUL WISDOM OF ANTS

Lighthearted and informative, though the premise may be a bit stretched.

An amiable introduction to our thrifty, sociable, teeming insect cousins.

Bunting notes that all the ants on Earth weigh roughly the same as all the people and observes that ants (like, supposedly, us) love recycling, helping others, and taking “micronaps.” They, too, live in groups, and their “superpower” is an ability to work together to accomplish amazing things. Bunting goes on to describe different sorts of ants within the colony (“Drone. Male. Does no housework. Takes to the sky. Reproduces. Drops dead”), how they communicate using pheromones, and how they get from egg to adult. He concludes that we could learn a lot from them that would help us leave our planet in better shape than it was when we arrived. If he takes a pass on mentioning a few less positive shared traits (such as our tendency to wage war on one another), still, his comparisons do invite young readers to observe the natural world more closely and to reflect on our connections to it. In the simple illustrations, generic black ants look up at viewers with little googly eyes while scurrying about the pages gathering food, keeping nests clean, and carrying outsized burdens.

Lighthearted and informative, though the premise may be a bit stretched. (Informational picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: March 19, 2024

ISBN: 9780593567784

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Crown

Review Posted Online: Jan. 5, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2024

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I'M TRYING TO LOVE FARTS

A hilarious “toot salute” to the gas we pass.

Continuing her valiant efforts to embrace the world’s less lovable contents from spiders and math to garbage and germs, Barton offers a new addition to her series.

Though the author/illustrator opens with a claim that farts have existed as long as humans—a howler she herself contradicts when she gets to introducing the far more ancient and “famously flatulent” termite—and even doubles down later with a similarly specious declaration about digestive system microbes, her overall assertion that passing gas is hilarious as well as natural and healthy is inarguable. After all, she notes, the oldest joke on record, going back nearly 4,000 years, is fart-related (she doesn’t repeat it, alas). The illustrations reinforce both themes; between endpapers featuring visual representations of nearly two dozen distinctive poots, each labeled with a synonym for the act, a serious young lecturer provides a simple discourse on the causes and contents of farts as well as about animals that also produce them or, like sloths and birds, don’t. The narrator is frequently derailed by a pesky brother’s wisecracks and billowing clouds of noxiously hued funk. In the end, though, both tan-skinned children wind up “feeling the fart love,” and perhaps readers will, too. Other human figures in the art are racially diverse, and one uses a wheelchair.

A hilarious “toot salute” to the gas we pass. (fascinating facts on flatulence, further resources) (Informational picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: Nov. 4, 2025

ISBN: 9780593693773

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: Aug. 2, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2025

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