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NATURE AT NIGHT

Both casual browsers and budding zoologists will light up.

A gallery of luminous natural beauties (not necessarily nocturnal), from puffins to polar lights.

Leading off with a lenticular 3-D cover image of a hawksbill sea turtle glimmering red and green, this (stock) photo gallery spans land, sea, and sky to present 23 lambent wonders—all animals except for the foxfire mushroom and the northern and southern auroras—enhanced by glow-in-the-dark highlights. Even without that gimmick the figures seem luminous against the deep, black backgrounds. Nor is the glow always external; chameleons shine from their very bones; fimbriated moray eels gleam in part from internal organs; and the mushrooms, an orange octopus, and several others in the lineup at least look brightly lit from within. Aside from occasional bobbles, such as a claim that glowworms luminesce as larvae opposite a photo of flashing adults and contradictory observations that polka-dot tree frogs shine either by natural or only in ultraviolet light, Regan’s lucid, specific remarks about how each organism makes and uses its lights are spot-on. Anita Sitarski’s Cold Light (2007) offers less-dazzling photography but makes a natural follow-up since it illuminates a wider range of examples (including light-producing rocks and minerals) in greater detail.

Both casual browsers and budding zoologists will light up. (glossary) (Informational picture book. 7-9)

Pub Date: Sept. 8, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-2281-0255-7

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Firefly

Review Posted Online: June 15, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2020

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RIVERS, SEAS AND OCEANS

From the Mack's World of Wonder series

Considering the flotilla of more watertight treatments available, a washout.

A dip into the diverse bodies of water on our planet and some of the ways we interact with them.

Like water itself, this survey doesn’t take any particular shape. Illustrated with large photos in which the author digitally inserts small cartoon animals and items, single-topic spreads are arranged in seemingly arbitrary order. They offer brief overviews of the water cycle; fresh, salt, and brackish waters and their natural residents; oceans; select seas, lakes, canals, and waterfalls; rivers both major (the Amazon, the Nile) and not so much (the Brooks River  in Alaska); “Famous Places” such as Venice and Yellowstone National Park; the “floating market” of Bangkok; and other subjects before suddenly running aground on the southern coast of Australia. Each topic concludes with a cartoon and a question (“Which dam is a little too low?” “Which rabbit is surprised by the geyser?”) that playfully test comprehension, but the one activity, a perfunctory suggestion to fill a bucket with seawater then wait for the water to evaporate, is no more feasible than the ensuing claim that the residue will be “the same salt that you have in the kitchen cupboard!” is accurate.

Considering the flotilla of more watertight treatments available, a washout. (Nonfiction. 7-9)

Pub Date: Oct. 15, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-60537-354-6

Page Count: 80

Publisher: Clavis

Review Posted Online: Aug. 20, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2017

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RODENT RASCALS

“Humans are lucky to have rodents,” Munro argues…and makes her case with equal warmth to hearts and minds.

Twenty-one representatives of the largest mammalian order pose in this fetching portrait gallery.

Each one depicted, all or in part, at actual size, the rodentine array begins with a pocket-watch–size African pygmy jerboa and concludes with the largest member of the clan, the “sweet-looking capybara.” In between, specimens climb the scale past chipmunks and northern flying squirrels to a Norway rat, porcupine, and groundhog. Despite a few outliers such as the naked mole rat and a rather aggressive-looking beaver, Munro’s animals—particularly her impossibly cute guinea pig—strongly exude shaggy, button-eyed appeal. Her subjects may come across as eye candy, but they are drawn with naturalistic exactitude, and in her accompanying descriptive comments, she often relates certain visible features to distinctive habitats and behaviors. She also has a terrific feel for the memorable fact: naked mole rats run as quickly backward in their tunnels as forward; African giant pouched rats have been trained to sniff out mines; the house mouse “is a romantic. A male mouse will sing squeaky love songs to his girlfriend” (that are, fortunately or otherwise, too high for humans to hear). Closing summaries will serve budding naturalists in need of further specifics about sizes, diets, geographical ranges, and the like.

“Humans are lucky to have rodents,” Munro argues…and makes her case with equal warmth to hearts and minds. (websites, index) (Informational picture book. 7-9)

Pub Date: Feb. 6, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-8234-3860-0

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Holiday House

Review Posted Online: Dec. 5, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2018

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