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LICE

HOW TO SURVIVE ON HUMANS

Required reading for lice or anyone likely to harbor them.

Life is tough for head lice, but as this thorough and sympathetic primer shows, they’re superbly adapted to face the challenges.

Though the images generally consist of isolated line images or silhouettes with muted orange highlights, they’re nevertheless large and clinically detailed—and sure to induce a mix of horror and fascination in human readers, even those with unsullied scalps. Addressing the ectoparasites themselves—“Your survival depends on your wits, your skills, and a pinch of good luck”—Páramo begins with an expansive gallery of lice cousins. She then explains how to choose suitable human hosts, describes salient anatomical features as well as feeding and mating habits, delivers warnings about hazards from multiple specific insecticides to lice combs, and finishes with a sprinkle of facts about human-lice relations through history and prehistory. “Good luck and happy infesting!” she concludes. The specific, no-nonsense information she delivers may help transform these tiny horrors into better-known and therefore more manageable ones for anxious children and parents. So will the occasionally giddy tone of the text, translated from Spanish. “You can’t fly,” the unseen narrator announces in large boldface text next to a fanciful image of a caped specimen. “You don’t even have wings. Superlouse ain’t a thing.”

Required reading for lice or anyone likely to harbor them. (afterword, QR code linking to an online educator’s guide) (Nonfiction. 7-10)

Pub Date: Aug. 5, 2025

ISBN: 9783039640553

Page Count: 204

Publisher: Helvetiq

Review Posted Online: April 4, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2025

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1001 BEES

Friends of these pollinators will be best served elsewhere.

This book is buzzing with trivia.

Follow a swarm of bees as they leave a beekeeper’s apiary in search of a new home. As the scout bees traverse the fields, readers are provided with a potpourri of facts and statements about bees. The information is scattered—much like the scout bees—and as a result, both the nominal plot and informational content are tissue-thin. There are some interesting facts throughout the book, but many pieces of trivia are too, well trivial, to prove useful. For example, as the bees travel, readers learn that “onion flowers are round and fluffy” and “fennel is a plant that is used in cooking.” Other facts are oversimplified and as a result are not accurate. For example, monofloral honey is defined as “made by bees who visit just one kind of flower” with no acknowledgment of the fact that bees may range widely, and swarm activity is described as a springtime event, when it can also occur in summer and early fall. The information in the book, such as species identification and measurement units, is directed toward British readers. The flat, thin-lined artwork does little to enhance the story, but an “I spy” game challenging readers to find a specific bee throughout is amusing.

Friends of these pollinators will be best served elsewhere. (Informational picture book. 8-10)

Pub Date: May 18, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-500-65265-7

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Thames & Hudson

Review Posted Online: April 13, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2021

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EVERYTHING AWESOME ABOUT SHARKS AND OTHER UNDERWATER CREATURES!

From the Everything Awesome About… series

An immersive dunk into a vast subject—and on course for shorter attention spans.

In the wake of Everything Awesome About Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Beasts! (2019), Lowery spins out likewise frothy arrays of facts and observations about sharks, whales, giant squid, and smaller but no less extreme (or at least extremely interesting) sea life.

He provides plenty of value-added features, from overviews of oceanic zones and environments to jokes, drawing instructions, and portrait galleries suitable for copying or review. While not one to pass up any opportunity to, for instance, characterize ambergris as “whale vomit perfume” or the clownfish’s protective coating as “snot armor,” he also systematically introduces members of each of the eight orders of sharks, devotes most of a page to the shark’s electroreceptive ampullae of Lorenzini, and even sheds light on the unobvious differences between jellyfish and the Portuguese man-of-war or the reason why the blue octopus is said to have “arms” rather than “tentacles.” He also argues persuasively that sharks have gotten a bad rap (claiming that more people are killed each year by…vending machines) and closes with pleas to be concerned about plastic waste, to get involved in conservation efforts, and (cannily) to get out and explore our planet because (quoting Jacques-Yves Cousteau) “People protect what they love.” Human figures, some with brown skin, pop up occasionally to comment in the saturated color illustrations. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10-by-17-inch double-page spreads viewed at 45% of actual size.)

An immersive dunk into a vast subject—and on course for shorter attention spans. (bibliography, list of organizations) (Nonfiction. 7-10)

Pub Date: Oct. 6, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-338-35973-2

Page Count: 128

Publisher: Orchard/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: June 29, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2020

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