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PLAY LIKE AN ANIMAL!

WHY CRITTERS SPLASH, RACE, TWIRL, AND CHASE

A lively addition to the animal shelf.

Just like human children, animals love to play, both to practice adult skills and to have fun.

Gianferrari plays with words, especially action verbs, to introduce an unusual array of animals. “Plonk, dig, slide” and “rub, plop, blow” are the sounds of collared peccaries and rhinos in the mud. “Nibble-fumble, hurdle-tumble, ready to rumble” describes wrestling rats. These playful words and phrases appear in large uppercase letters set at a slight angle to represent movement on the page. A straightforward short sentence identifies the animal and its actions. Boxed explanations add information—ungulates are mammals with hooves, for example—and describe what the depicted animals are learning. Playing tug of war, wolves learn fair play. Both elephants and dolphins practice cooperation through play. Other examples are monkeys, ravens, river otters, dolphins, kangaroos, gorillas, and keas. In the backmatter the author explains why readers should play, how they should “play by the rules, like these animals do”: stepping away if hurt; apologizing; accepting the apology. Finally, there is a further, fairly dense paragraph about each of the featured animals. Illustrator Powell used paints, handmade textures, and digital techniques to create her appealing images. Most spreads show the animals in a natural scene, but a few show a diverse set of five children and the artist’s own black-and-white dog. (On the jacket-flap bio she invites readers to look for him.)

A lively addition to the animal shelf. (Informational picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: April 7, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-5415-5771-0

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Millbrook/Lerner

Review Posted Online: Dec. 17, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2020

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BOOK OF BONES

10 RECORD-BREAKING ANIMALS

A rib-tickling gallery, anything but dry.

The inside stories on 10 creatures who can lay claim to bone-y extremes.

Framed as a “Who am I?” guessing game, the illustrations alternate simplified white skeletons on solid black backgrounds on rectos with, on those pages’ versos, painted views of the fleshed-out creatures featuring invisible but raised bones that can be felt. In accompanying clues and narratives in the voices of the creatures, Balkan makes much use of colorful comparisons and atypical but revealing units of measure: “Not counting my tail,” the Etruscan shrew (smallest bones) notes, “my SKELETON is the size of a paperclip and weighs less than a single raisin!” Likewise, thanks to having the largest mandible (i.e., bone of any sort), a blue whale boasts “I could fit one hundred of your friends on my tongue.” (“But don’t worry. I don’t eat humans.”) The author makes no bones about playing fast and loose with the premise, admitting that some “records” are speculative—which bird has the lightest bones? “Let’s not quibble,” responds the peregrine falcon—and slipping in a moot claim that the hammerhead shark has the “fewest bones” because its skeleton isn’t bone at all but cartilage. Still, as she points out at beginning and end, all of the bones here have human equivalents, and that connection should give both casual browsers and budding naturalists plenty to gnaw on.

A rib-tickling gallery, anything but dry. (bibliography) (Informational picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: Sept. 18, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-7148-7512-5

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Phaidon

Review Posted Online: Aug. 20, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2017

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A BEAR'S LIFE

From the My Great Bear Rainforest series

An appropriate companion to Wolf Island (2017) to nourish the sense of wonder.

A nature photographer shares his images of young bearhood in the Great Bear Rainforest.

Appropriately, McAllister’s name comes first on the cover and title page. The heart of this album is his photography: two beautiful landscapes showing the pristine Great Bear Rainforest bookend many, many close-ups of bears. There are grizzly bears, black bears, and the one-in-10 black bear with white fur that is called a spirit bear. Aimed at young readers and listeners, the simple text focuses on the lives of bear cubs and their parents, finding food—plant shoots and berries, barnacles and other seashore treats, salmon—napping, exploring, and playing. Most spreads include a full-page photo (or one crossing the fold) and one or two smaller ones plus a paragraph or two. There’s no attempt to explain the location of this pristine coastal wilderness in British Columbia, which the author and photographer have described in such books for older readers as The Salmon Bears (2010) and other titles. There is, though, a nod to the indigenous human inhabitants with a summary of the Raven tale explaining the existence of the white bears. There’s also an intriguing description of bear fishing styles: grabbing, scooping, pinning, crushing.

An appropriate companion to Wolf Island (2017) to nourish the sense of wonder. (Informational picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: Aug. 22, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-4598-1270-3

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Orca

Review Posted Online: May 23, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2017

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