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Winner!
Children's Science Picture Book
Where
in the Wild? Camouflaged Creatures Concealed and Revealed
by David Schwartz and Yael Schy, with illustrations by Dwight Kuhn
(Tricycle Press).
SB&F
Review:
The title and subtitle of this book, replete with an ellipsis
pause, had me expecting an exposé of deception in the natural
world. I wasn't disappointed. "Camouflage," from a French
word meaning "to disguise," seems to have entered common
usage from military vocabulary in the early 20th century, but even
then, military applications alluded to the many animals in nature
that were able to avoid detection by blending into their surroundings.
The authors ask readers to look carefully at a series of 11 full-page
color photographs and find in them the animals, or their eggs in
one instance, camouflaged from would-be predators or prey. Ten of
the photographs have poems on a facing page offering rhyming hints
as to where to look and what to look for. Read the poems out loud
for their full descriptive effect, but cleverly, some of the poems
also have the printed lines arranged as visual hints: "Motionless"
is printed in four "double-jointed" lines representing
the four pairs of the motionless spider's legs, and the lines of
"Serpentine" undulate across the page. At the bottom of
each picture is the notation "lift to find me." Each folio
unfolds to vividly reveal the previously camouflaged creature against
a faded-out background. Each animal revealed has an accompanying
page of life history information, with additional lore on its use
of color and behavior in avoiding predation or in assisting in capturing
prey. However, suggestions for further reading are lacking. Although
the authors present camouflage "experts," from coyotes
and deer fawns to green snakes, tree frogs, and salamanders, the
masters of deception are the insects, here represented by ladybug
beetles and moths, the latter often camouflaged in developmental
stages and in the adult. In spite of the many nature documentaries
on public and cable television and the seemingly endless proliferation
of nature and animal sites on the Web, these authors and their photographer
have put together interactive hard copy that should captivate today's
youngsters. The only problem with the book is that it ends abruptly.
I turned the last page expecting more! Teachers and parents should
go to the publisher's Web page (www.tricyclepress.com)
to download a teacher's guide.
About the
authors:
David Schwartz is the author of fifty children's books that make
math and science come alive, including How Much is a Million?,
G is for Googol, Q is for Quark, and If You Hopped Like a
Frog. David is a popular speaker at schools in the U.S. and
abroad. Learn more about him at www.davidschwartz.com.
Yael Schy is
a consultant, trainer, facilitator, and coach, who uses improvisational
theater and dance to encourage leadership, teambuilding, and creative
thinking in the workplace. She is co-author of a business training
book, Teamwork Tools, and she also loves to write poems and
songs. David and Yael live in Oakland, California, with their two
well-camouflaged cats, Sushi and Sashimi.
About the
photographer:
Dwight Kuhn's beautiful composed nature photographs have been
featured in 125 children's books. His work has been recognized by
the Children's Book Council, the Scientific American, and the John
Burroughs Association. He lives with his wife and two dogs in Dexter,
Maine. To see more of his photographs visit www.kuhnphoto.net
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