Next book

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

Next book

DON'T LET THEM DISAPPEAR

A winning heads up for younger readers just becoming aware of the wider natural world.

An appeal to share concern for 12 familiar but threatened, endangered, or critically endangered animal species.

The subjects of Marino’s intimate, close-up portraits—fairly naturalistically rendered, though most are also smiling, glancing up at viewers through human eyes, and posed at rest with a cute youngling on lap or flank—steal the show. Still, Clinton’s accompanying tally of facts about each one’s habitat and daily routines, to which the title serves as an ongoing refrain, adds refreshingly unsentimental notes: “A single giraffe kick can kill a lion!”; “[S]hivers of whale sharks can sense a drop of blood if it’s in the water nearby, though they eat mainly plankton.” Along with tucking in collective nouns for each animal (some not likely to be found in major, or any, dictionaries: an “embarrassment” of giant pandas?), the author systematically cites geographical range, endangered status, and assumed reasons for that status, such as pollution, poaching, or environmental change. She also explains the specific meaning of “endangered” and some of its causes before closing with a set of doable activities (all uncontroversial aside from the suggestion to support and visit zoos) and a list of international animal days to celebrate.

A winning heads up for younger readers just becoming aware of the wider natural world. (Informational picture book. 6-8)

Pub Date: April 2, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-525-51432-9

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Philomel

Review Posted Online: Jan. 27, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2019

Next book

YOU'RE A GOOD SWIMMER

Not exactly evenhanded in ascribing genetic agency but joyous, clever, and inclusive.

Actor and podcaster Rivas offers effervescent affirmation that when it comes to being alive, we are all huge winners.

It all begins with “the biggest race of your life,” depicted in Boroff’s animated, glowing illustrations as a cloud of sperm rendered as thumbprints or thumbprint-shaped blobs with long, wriggly tails zooming toward an egg cell. Being “crafty…quick…smart and a little wild,” one particular “you” got there first, and with a bit of placental protection, “all the forces of the universe cooperated so that you could be here.” Rivas covers the bases, evolution-wise, with separate, allusive references to a heritage measured in “billions of years” and to something “mysterious, immense, and profound” that “had already decided, since the beginning of time, that you would exist.” More importantly, you were wanted, the author affirms. And, being “a champion of champions. Genetically speaking,” you “WERE BORN A WINNER.” The egg’s role doesn’t get much explicit notice in the narrative, but it does in the artwork, which includes schematic but recognizable views of an ovum, a placenta, and several figures with bulging midriffs. Also, on another page, silhouetted couples, including one who uses a wheelchair, dance at a “starting line” (and “there are many starting lines,” Rivas writes).

Not exactly evenhanded in ascribing genetic agency but joyous, clever, and inclusive. (Picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: July 16, 2024

ISBN: 9798986827346

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Wheat Penny Press

Review Posted Online: May 17, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2024

Close Quickview