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PLANTS IN DISGUISE

FEATURES OF CREATURES IN FLOWERS AND FOLIAGE

Wilts next to similar flower guides, such as Susan Stockdale’s vivid Fantastic Flowers (2017).

A gallery of flora named after fauna.

In these introductions to 20 North American wildflowers and grasses with fancied resemblances to animal features, “fancied” is definitely the operative term. Schmid stacks the deck, visually, with impressionistic watercolor images created to emphasize supposed resemblances between each alphabetically arranged plant/animal pair, plus an added line drawing of an isolated leaf, flower, or seed head. Even so, the similarities aren’t always easy to see. The text offers vague claims that “Native Americans” used cattails, goat’s beard, and other plants for medicinal purposes or, as in the case of “some Navajo people,” to “protect against witches.” Moreover, Hedegaard devotes much of each botanical note to labored comparisons: “Mule-Ears / Wyethia amplexicaulis / This plant is all ears, but it can’t hear a word.” Also, some of the choices, such as elkhorn, can refer to multiple different plants, and for coltsfoot and deer’s foot, readers will have to take the creators’ word for it as the hoof prints for which they are named are never actually depicted.

Wilts next to similar flower guides, such as Susan Stockdale’s vivid Fantastic Flowers (2017). (websites, range notes) (Informational picture book. 6-9)

Pub Date: April 27, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-87842-673-7

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Mountain Press

Review Posted Online: March 5, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2017

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TOUCH THE EARTH

From the Julian Lennon White Feather Flier Adventure series , Vol. 1

“It’s time to head back home,” the narrator concludes. “You’ve touched the Earth in so many ways.” Who knew it would be so...

A pro bono Twinkie of a book invites readers to fly off in a magic plane to bring clean water to our planet’s oceans, deserts, and brown children.

Following a confusingly phrased suggestion beneath a soft-focus world map to “touch the Earth. Now touch where you live,” a shake of the volume transforms it into a plane with eyes and feathered wings that flies with the press of a flat, gray “button” painted onto the page. Pressing like buttons along the journey releases a gush of fresh water from the ground—and later, illogically, provides a filtration device that changes water “from yucky to clean”—for thirsty groups of smiling, brown-skinned people. At other stops, a tap on the button will “help irrigate the desert,” and touching floating bottles and other debris in the ocean supposedly makes it all disappear so the fish can return. The 20 children Coh places on a globe toward the end are varied of skin tone, but three of the four young saviors she plants in the flier’s cockpit as audience stand-ins are white. The closing poem isn’t so openly parochial, though it seldom rises above vague feel-good sentiments: “Love the Earth, the moon and sun. / All the children can be one.”

“It’s time to head back home,” the narrator concludes. “You’ve touched the Earth in so many ways.” Who knew it would be so easy to clean the place up and give everyone a drink? (Picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: April 11, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-5107-2083-1

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Sky Pony Press

Review Posted Online: Feb. 3, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2017

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PLUTO GETS THE CALL

Hurray for the underdog.

Heart (-shaped surface feature) literally broken by its demotion from planet status, Pluto glumly conducts readers on a tour of the solar system.

You’d be bummed, too. Angrily rejecting the suggestions of “mean scientists” from Earth that “ice dwarf” or “plutoid” might serve as well (“Would you like to be called humanoid?”), Pluto drifts out of the Kuiper Belt to lead readers past the so-called “real” planets in succession. All sport faces with googly eyes in Keller’s bright illustrations, and distinct personalities, too—but also actual physical characteristics (“Neptune is pretty icy. And gassy. I’m not being mean, he just is”) that are supplemented by pages of “fun facts” at the end. Having fended off Saturn’s flirtation, endured Jupiter’s stormy reception (“Keep OFF THE GAS!”) and relentless mockery from the asteroids, and given Earth the cold shoulder, Pluto at last takes the sympathetic suggestion of Venus and Mercury to talk to the Sun. “She’s pretty bright.” A (what else?) warm welcome, plus our local star’s comforting reminders that every celestial body is unique (though “people talk about Uranus for reasons I don’t really want to get into”), and anyway, scientists are still arguing the matter because that’s what “science” is all about, mend Pluto’s heart at last: “Whatever I’m called, I’ll always be PLUTO!”

Hurray for the underdog. (afterword) (Informational picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Nov. 12, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5344-1453-2

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Beach Lane/Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Aug. 11, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2019

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