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1001 BIRDS

Flock away from this one.

A hodgepodge of bird facts.

While there is a throughline to this book—the annual migration of swallows from Europe to Africa—it may take young listeners most of the book before they realize it, as it’s a subtle aspect that is buried in an avalanche of seemingly miscellaneous facts about many different species of birds. From habitats and nesting habits to prey and how birds fly, the facts come hard and fast in small paragraphs of text scattered across the pages, though there isn’t much rhyme or reason to their order—wingspan is used several pages before it is defined—and some information is repeated, even on the same page. Rzezak’s stylized birds have expressive eyebrows that unfortunately often make them look angry. The stylization can also at times make species look too similar to one another, as on the page shared by the sociable weavers and the swallows, which differ in shape only in their tails. On a page with lots of birds on a power line, the one redheaded swallow readers are told to find on every spread is among a group labeled blackbirds instead of with its fellow swallows at the other end of the line, and its body type matches the blackbirds’. Various words are bolded in the text, species names among them, but there is no glossary, and the book lacks backmatter and a map as well, serious lacks in a nonfiction text for children.

Flock away from this one. (Nonfiction. 4-8)

Pub Date: May 23, 2023

ISBN: 9780500653241

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Thames & Hudson

Review Posted Online: Jan. 24, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2023

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SERGEANT BILLY

THE TRUE STORY OF THE GOAT WHO WENT TO WAR

Imaginatively conveys the drudgery—if not the sheer terror—of war to a young audience.

This is the remarkable true story of an ordinary goat who became the beloved mascot of the Fifth Canadian Battalion during World War I.

In Messier’s dryly humorous tale, Billy adapts well to army life, traveling with the soldiers on training exercises, boarding the troop ship to England with them, and being smuggled onboard the ship to France in an empty orange box. He never complains about the squalid conditions of life in the trenches (he is depicted bleating at a rat) and provides important moral support to frightened or tired soldiers, who mention him affectionately in their letters home. He even saves lives, butting three soldiers into a trench before a shell explodes. Billy becomes such a great protector and defender of his regiment that he is promoted to sergeant and eventually becomes a decorated war hero, surviving the war and ultimately returning to his original owner, depicted as a little girl on a farm in Saskatchewan. Messier’s smooth, well-paced text and Reich’s muted gouache illustrations in warlike tones of olive and brown well convey the poignancy and humor of the story. Such afflictions as trench foot and shell shock are conveyed though not explored in depth, and no characters die. All human characters appear to be white.

Imaginatively conveys the drudgery—if not the sheer terror—of war to a young audience. (author’s note, photographs) (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: Sept. 17, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-7352-6442-7

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Tundra Books

Review Posted Online: June 9, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2019

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ANIMAL HABITATS

SEARCH & FIND ACTIVITY BOOK

The art is a bigger draw than the text, but both reward close looks.

The focus is on food chains in this follow-up to the dazzling Animal Camouflage (2017).

Once again Dennis’ precise, realistic cut-paper illustrations command attention. Labeled silhouettes of individual plants and animals are color coded to show their predator-prey relationships within seven marine or terrestrial habitats; these are followed by intricate, full-page monochrome scenes in which the flora and fauna are artfully incorporated, to be picked out by the sharp of eye. The accompanying observations and infographics offer a light wash of general observations, questions (“Which creature is the apex predator?”), and repetitive instructions to seek producers and consumers in each large picture. Hutchinson properly develops the notion of “web” along with “chain” from the outset. Unfortunately, he places the selected wildlife into “trophic levels” without clearly defining the term, inconsistently identifies some figures by name but others only by function (“insect-eating bird” for example), and includes “decomposers” only in the “Woodland” food chain. But there’s room for delight: For an array of woodland creatures that includes an earthworm, the author asks which can climb trees…and even confirmed young naturalists may be astonished at the (correct) answer at the end: “All of them!”

The art is a bigger draw than the text, but both reward close looks. (Informational picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Aug. 27, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-61689-849-6

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press

Review Posted Online: May 11, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2019

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