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SUPERPOD

SAVING THE ENDANGERED ORCAS OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST

Gives human superpods fresh impetus to learn more about these appealing apex predators.

An ocean policy expert for the Seattle Aquarium introduces orcas and the people who study and protect them.

Focusing on an orca population of three pods collectively dubbed the Southern Residents, Nickum highlights their much-studied family behaviors and relations—adding a large family tree to the backmatter and noting, for instance, how younglings abandoned by one pod will often be adopted by another, how widely ranging groups enjoy occasional “superpod” reunions, and, poignantly, chronicling a mother’s refusal to stop trying to care for a newly born calf for weeks after its death. Kim Perez Valice’s The Orca Scientists (2018) profiles the same group of orcas and has better photographs (taken by Andy Comins), but along with lively personal reactions to watching orcas from shore and riding out with researchers who employ drones, hydrophones, and even dogs trained to sniff out orca poop, Nickum interviews experts, among them members of the Lummi Nation, and adds observations about “transient” orcas from other lineages who exhibit differences, such as preying on seals rather than salmon. She also makes a strong plea for readers “to join the human superpod” working to preserve and support these social sea mammals against multiple threats ranging from capture for sale to marine parks to noise pollution and loss of salmon spawning grounds.

Gives human superpods fresh impetus to learn more about these appealing apex predators. (maps, resource lists, source notes) (Nonfiction. 10-12)

Pub Date: April 11, 2023

ISBN: 9781641607933

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Chicago Review Press

Review Posted Online: Dec. 23, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2023

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THE HUMAN RACE

Readers hoping for alternatives to the dominant narratives will not find them here.

Factoids about various “races” across time.

Across 46 double-page spreads, readers learn about international “races” that cover a range of topics, from actual contests such as the Olympic Games and the Tour de France to general firsts, such as to the top of Mount Everest and to discover radiation. Along the way, facts and information are dolloped out in small paragraphs that stimulate and tease readers’ interest. Sadly, the teasing happens too frequently, and information is provided with little context or supplemental information. For example, readers learn that two forerunners to the bicycle were the draisine and the penny farthing. But the draisine looks like a modern bicycle without pedals while the penny farthing is a vastly different (and scarier-looking) conveyance. What prompted the design of the penny farthing? The Eurocentric focus of the book is a significantly larger flaw, as White faces and White achievements dominate the facts and illustrations. Sherpa mountaineer Tenzing Norgay is appropriately given equal visual and textual focus to Edmund Hillary, a White New Zealander, but Japanese climber Junko Tabei, the first woman to summit Everest, is depicted fully covered behind snow goggles and oxygen mask in a far corner of the page. Likewise, the information about Africa focuses textually and visually on David Livingstone, and the only Indigenous Africans depicted are early Homo sapiens dressed in stereotypical animal furs. Figures highlighted in the science section include Charles Darwin, Marie Curie, Isaac Newton—it’s the same old, same old. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10.8-by-19.2-inch double-page spreads viewed at 81% of actual size.)

Readers hoping for alternatives to the dominant narratives will not find them here. (index) (Nonfiction. 10-12)

Pub Date: Oct. 20, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-7112-5668-2

Page Count: 96

Publisher: QEB Publishing

Review Posted Online: Aug. 31, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2020

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ATLAS OF RECORD-BREAKING ADVENTURES

A COLLECTION OF THE BIGGEST, FASTEST, LONGEST, TOUGHEST, TALLEST AND MOST DEADLY THINGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD

From the Atlas of . . . series

Readers after records should stick with Guinness.

Readers will gain a record-breaking knowledge of trivia.

Take a trip across all seven continents with explorers as they discover factoids galore. The explorers, one who presents White and the other with light-brown skin, travel the world, often accompanied by a local guide, gleaning information along the way. The pages depict surreal landscapes and maps featuring slightly anthropomorphized animals, such as a bindle-carrying bird and pirate hat–wearing caiman. Each double-page spread concentrates on one area and is splattered with tiny text that provides uneven levels of information. For example, in one box readers learn that cheetahs “accelerate from zero to 55 miles per hour in just three seconds” and that ostriches are “the fastest creature on two legs.” Great! But how fast are ostriches? The same page notes that a cheetah can “reach a top speed of over 60 miles per hour.” Wait! Isn’t it 55 mph? Other facts are equally vague. Readers learn that the Greenland shark is “the world’s oldest vertebrate,” but does this mean longest-living vertebrate or the vertebrate that has been around the longest? They are also instructed to hold their breath with a Cuvier’s beaked whale, “nature’s best air-breathing diver,” but aren’t told how long these whales can go between breaths. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10.8-by-15.2-inch double-page spreads viewed at 84% of actual size.)

Readers after records should stick with Guinness. (seek-and-find game, index) (Nonfiction. 10-12)

Pub Date: Oct. 6, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-7112-5565-4

Page Count: 96

Publisher: Wide Eyed Editions

Review Posted Online: Aug. 17, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2020

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