Ladybugs

Ladybugs (Creepy Critters) by Sian Smith is just the thing to ward off the winter blahs. This nonfiction picture book for the youngest reader features big bright photographs of insects that are highly popular with children:  ladybugs!

The lively rhyming text and large format makes this a perfect for reading aloud. The rhymes really help beginning readers sail through the text, as well.

What I really like about this book is that it tackles some common myths about ladybugs, like that you can tell a ladybug’s age by the number of spots. Different species of ladybugs have different numbers of spots, so the number of spots is more about what kind it is. Once a beetle is full grown, its number of spots does not change.

Smith packs in an amazing amount of information, including what the larvae look like, what ladybugs eat and where they spend the winter. She includes an activity in the end to reinforce learning, asking the reader to find two ladybugs hidden in an illustration. Will the reader remember the life stages of ladybugs?

Ladybugs is an up-close look at an interesting and appealing insect, one that you will likely revisit again and again.

 

For related information and suggestions for ladybug activities, visit Growing with Science.

Reading Level: PreK-K
Publisher: Heinemann-Raintree (August 1, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1410948226
ISBN-13: 978-1410948229

 

 

Book was provided for review purposes.

 

 

 

 

Come visit the STEM Friday blog each week to find more great Science, Technology, Engineering and Math books.

Island: A Story of the Galápagos

Jason Chin has walked the line between fiction and nonfiction in his earlier acclaimed books, Redwoods and Coral Reefs. This time with Island: A Story of the Galápagos, however, he falls definitively on the nonfiction side, with a beautifully illustrated narrative nonfiction relating the events that surround the development of the Galapágos Islands.  

Equating the stages of island building to that of a human, he walks the reader through “Birth,” “Childhood,” “Adulthood,” and “Old Age” of the islands. He prominently features many of the animals that are unique to the Galapágos, their arrival and the consequent changes they went through, like the enchanting Galapágos giant tortoise and the marine iguana.

As in his previous books, the lavish illustrations are often breathtaking. Between more standard full page illustrations, he has developed a series of small illustrations with text underneath that have the intimate feel of a family slide show.

Many older people dream of visiting the unique and fantastic Galapágos Islands someday. This book will be sure to excite children about them as well. Fabulous addition to any library!

Reading level: Ages 5 and up
Hardcover: 36 pages
Publisher: Flash Point (September 18, 2012)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1596437162
ISBN-13: 978-1596437166

 

 

 

Nonfiction Monday is a blogging celebration of nonfiction books for kids. We invite you to join us. For more information and a schedule, stop by Booktalking to see who is hosting each week.

Today’s round-up is at Jean Little Library.

A Flower in the Snow

Today, for a bit of a change, I’m participating in a blog tour for A Flower in the Snow by Tracey Corderoy and illustrated by Sophie Allsopp, which is a fiction picture book that is as visually refreshing and soft as newly fallen snow.

In the story Luna and Bear are great friends who do everything together, even share colds. One day Bear find a special yellow flower in the snow and he gives it to Luna. When the petals fall off and the flower wilts, Luna is sad that her special flower is gone. Bear sails away. He is determined to find her another flower. In the meanwhile, Luna discovers Bear is gone and misses him. Will he find a flower? Will he ever return?

The theme of loss, first of the flower and then of her friend, are events that children can relate to. Author Tracey Corderoy worked with children who were returning to school after long illnesses, and it is likely this audience she had in mind when she wrote the story. I’m sure the children wonder whether they will ever see their friends again and how will their relationship might be different if they do. This book gives them hope that things can get better. The book would also be appropriate to comfort a child who is missing a parent who is away.

Sophie Alsopp‘s delicate watercolors are a lovely match to this sweet story. Alsopp based her illustrations of the yellow flower on a plant that can actually flower in the snow, the winter aconite, Eranthis cilicica.

A Flower in the Snow is a gentle and unexpected delight, rather like finding, well, a flower in the snow.

Reading level: Ages 4 and up
Hardcover: 32 pages
Publisher: Sourcebooks Jabberwocky (December 1, 2012)
ISBN-10: 1402277407
ISBN-13: 978-1402277405

Arc was provided electronically via NetGalley.

Nonfiction Monday December 10, 2012

A sincere thank you to everyone who chose to celebrate children’s nonfiction today by taking time to create a blog post, even though it is an incredibly busy time of year. Kudos!

(Links to the book titles take you to the full review.)

 

Lisa is up first this morning at Shelf-employed with The Invincible Microbe: Tuberculosis and the Never-Ending Search for a Cure. She says that she reflects “on my own personal recollections of the disease – from the days of sticking American Lung Association ‘Christmas seals’ on our cards and letters to the day when my youngest child received his ‘bubble test.’ Tuberculosis – it’s been with us all since the beginning and we haven’t stopped it yet – a frightening and fascinating topic.”

 

Writing at Sally’s Bookshelf, Sue joins us today with Far from Shore: Chronicles of an Open Ocean Voyage. Artist/author/biologist Sophie Webb describes and paints her adventures aboard her research vessel during a true-life cruise through the Pacific.

 

 

At A Teaching Life, Tara is sharing a book about the immigrant experience in America with a different mirror : A History of Multicultural America for Young People by Ronald Takaki adapted by Rebecca Stefoff.

 

 

Jeanne reviews The Fantastic Jungles of Henri Rousseau at True Tales & A Cherry On Top.  Did you know that “Henri Rousseau began painting at age forty without formal training, and his art was ridiculed year after year(?) But he kept painting because that is what he loved to do. As he said to a journalist, ‘I don’t know if you’re like me … but when I go into the glass houses and I see the strange plants of exotic lands, it seems to me that I enter into a dream. I feel that I’m somebody else completely.’ Rousseau’s story captures the power of imagination!”

 

Amy says her 7-year-old daughter devoured the terrific beginning reader nonfiction picture book, Castle: How It Works by David Macaulay with Sheila Keenan, reviewed at Hope Is the Word.

Debbie of The Swimmer Writer takes a look at Timeless Thomas: How Thomas Edison Changed Our Lives
 by Gene Barretta. She reports this is not a traditional biography of Thomas Edison, but instead it discusses the impact his inventions had on our lives.

 

At Supratentorial, Alice and her family enjoyed Minette’s Feast, a fantastic new biography of Julia Child. (Minette is one lucky cat.)

 

Look for a review of Annie Sullivan and the Trials of Helen Keller by Joseph Lambert at JeanLittleLibrary, where Jennifer writes, “there have been a lot of biographies of Helen Keller, but this graphic biography focuses on Annie Sullivan and the art conveys a whole new dimension to the characters of the two girls.”

Margo at The Fourth Musketeer recommends Picasso: I the King, Yo el rey for children 12 years old and older. She points out this “new biography in verse of the iconic 20th century artist” may look like a picture book, but it is definitely for more mature readers.

 

Perogyo of Perogies & Gyoza shares Island Kids, which is a collection of adventurous stories about kids on the Pacific islands of British Columbia, “with such fascinating topics as rats, parrots, monkeys, cougars, and a chocolate strike!” Who wouldn’t want to know more?

 

Lynn Rutan and Cindy Dobrez of Bookends: Booklist Online Youth Blog ” are reviewing a wonderful book for elementary and middle school readers – The Skull in the Rock. This is a fabulous book that combines the biography of a scientist, an explanation of current methods and theories in human evolution and an exciting discovery.” Now, that sound like quite a find.

 

Congratulations to Anastasia on the release of her new book, Developing and Designing Your Glee Club Performance. She says, “it shows high school students how to start their own glee club (a.k.a. show choir).” Sounds like a fun project, see details at Booktalking.

Abby has found treasure in the form of Golden Domes and Silver Lanterns: A Muslim Book of Colors , a “gorgeous book sharing information about Islam through the lens of exploring different colors.” This all can be found at Abby the Librarian.

 

 

Janet Squires, of All About the Books with Janet Squires, suggests The Kids’ Guide to Paper Airplanes, because “the holiday season is filled with advertising for digital and electronic games and toys, but sometimes fun can be found in the simplest of items — paper!” How true!

 


Nancy found a book to explain Hanukkah to her children. She says Celebrate Hanukkah has “really great photos.” Take a look at The Busy Mom Bookshelf.

Alicia of The LibrariYAn shares Titanic: Voices From the Disaster by Deborah Hopkinson. She writes, “Not only is it thoroughly researched (with plenty of extras for those who want to learn more), but the narrative, which weaves together the stories of various crew and passengers, is rich with detail and written in such a compelling style that it’s hard to put down.”

 

Here at Wrapped In Foil, I reviewed the picture book biography Queen of the Track: Alice Coachman, Olympic High-Jump Champion by Heather Lang and illustrated by Floyd Cooper.

That finishes our round-up for today. Hope to see you all next week.

 

Nonfiction Monday is a blogging celebration of nonfiction books for kids. We invite you to join us. For more information and a schedule, stop by Booktalking to see who is hosting each week.