The Manatee Scientists: Saving Vulnerable Species

The Manatee Scientists: Saving Vulnerable Species by Peter Lourie, part of the respected Scientists in the Field series, follows scientists from around the world trying to learn more about manatees in a race protect them from extinction.

Manatees are fascinating. Distantly related to elephants, these large, lumbering herbivores live exclusively in warm waters. They are found in Florida, the Caribbean, the Amazon, and West Africa.

As the title suggests, the book follows leading manatee scientists in their studies. Peter Lourie documents the techniques the scientists use and the problems they encounter. In the Amazon River basin, the author accompanies Fernando Rosas on a boat trip to follow radio-tagged manatees that have been released from captivity.  He flies with John Reynolds, who does an aerial count of manatees in warm Florida waters, and shows researcher Lucy Keith rescuing West African manatees trapped behind a dam in Senegal. Sadly, one of the problems the scientists encounter in trying to preserve the wild populations is that the people who live along the rivers in both South America and Africa rely on manatees for food.

Peter Lourie is a photographer as well as author, and took many of the numerous color photographs. His narration adds a real sense of adventure to what the scientists are doing.

Cybils notes: It would have been nice to see a bit more about what the scientists were finding out. By that I mean I wondered what their results were, not just their methods. For example, it would be nice to learn if manatees really are useful to keep down vegetation in lakes that serve hydroelectric plants. Also, it would probably have been appropriate to mention the Steller’s sea cow, a relative of the manatees that really did go extinct.

The Manatee Scientists: Saving Vulnerable Species has been nominated for a Cybils award in the MG/YA nonfiction category. It will be a big hit with nature lovers and budding scientists. For informal science, use the book to accompany a trip to an aquarium that houses manatees, or even better, a trip to Florida to see manatees in the wild.

Video of Florida manatees in action:

Reading level: Ages 9 and up
Hardcover: 80 pages
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Books for Children (April 11, 2011)
ISBN-10: 054715254X
ISBN-13: 978-0547152547

Stem Friday is at Celebrate Science today. Click through for links to more excellent STEM books.

If you would like to participate in STEM Friday in the future, go to Booktalking blog for more information.

Explorers Who Made It…Or Died Trying

Explorers Who Made It… Or Died Trying by Frieda Wishinsky and illustrated by Bill Dickson is a fun book about twelve famous explorers who got A’s in daring and persistence (according to Wishinkey’s report cards), but did not always get along well with others. This book has been nominated for a Cybils award in the MG/YA nonfiction category.

This book is a fun, fast read. It is broken into ten chapters with plenty of subheadings, so it is easy to find just the information you are looking for. The black and white illustrations include plenty of maps for geography lessons, plus less-than-serious cartoons.

It is perfect for children who are doing research on historical figures, and who are interested in adventurers.

The explorers included are:

  • Erik the Red and Leif Eriksson
    •    Marco Polo
    •    Henry Hudson
    •    Christopher Columbus
    •    James Cook
    •    Hernán Cortés
    •    Samuel de Champlain
    •    Lewis and Clark
    •    John Franklin
    •    Roald Amundsen

Paperback: 160 pages
Publisher: Scholastic Canada (Oct 1 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1443100102
ISBN-13: 978-1443100106

This book was provided by the publisher for review purposes.

Be sure to look for more information about children’s books at today’s Book Talk Tuesday.

Into the Unknown: How Great Explorers Found Their Way by Land, Sea, and Air

Into the Unknown: How Great Explorers Found Their Way by Land, Sea, and Air by Stewart Ross and illustrated by Stephen Biesty is an ode to adventure and discovery that is full of unfolding cutaways and cross-section illustrations, sure to thrill visual and kinesthetic learners. It was a 2011 Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor winner and has been nominated for a Cybils award in the MG/YA nonfiction category

Stewart Ross say he loves history, and his passion shows. From the first Greek to sail to the Arctic circle, to Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin’s trip to the moon, Ross follows fourteen great explorers in chronological order as they course into the unknown.

What really makes the book, however, are the absolutely fabulously detailed cutaway illustrations by Stephen Biesty. For a child or young adult interested in transportation, particularly ship building, the illustrations are gold mines of technical information. Also included are maps, including the dust jacket which unfolds into a world map showing where each of the explorers traveled. Very cool!

Students of history, science and engineering will find Into the Unknown a book to come back to again and again. Be sure to pair  it with a hands-on challenge to see how long a paper boat can float, or other related activities for kinesthetic learners.

Other reviews may be found at:

NC Teacher Stuff

The Book Chook

Great Kid Books

Reading level: Ages 8 and up
Hardcover: 96 pages
Publisher: Candlewick; Rei/Map edition (April 12, 2011)
ISBN-10: 0763649481
ISBN-13: 978-0763649487

Provided by the publisher for review purposes.

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.

This week’s post is at Geo Librarian.

Tom Thumb: The Remarkable True Story of a Man in Miniature

Tom Thumb: The Remarkable True Story of a Man in Miniature by George Sullivan is a biography of a dwarf who grew up as part of P.T. Barnum’s freak show, yet managed to achieve wealth and fame on his own merits, becoming one of the first modern celebrities of world renown.  

Author George Sullivan is interested in photographs. When he kept encountering photos of Tom Thumb’s wedding, he became intrigued. Why were there so many photographs from the Civil War era still available? Who were the people in the photographs really?  Sullivan’s questions and the answers he found led him to write this biography.

And what an intriguing story he stumbled on. Tom Thumb was actually a man named Charles S. Stratton, who was born in 1838. His parents became alarmed when Charley, as they called him, failed to grow. In fact he only weighed fifteen pounds at four years old and was twenty-four inches tall. His parents worried about Charley’s future, so when P.T. Barnum discovered him and offered to pay money to exhibit Charley in his museum (really a freak show), Charley’s father was all for it.

P.T. Barnum’s story is entwined with that of the character he created for Charley, General Tom Thumb. Fortunately for both of them, Charley was a natural entertainer whose intriguing small stature and outsize personality drew the attention of anyone who met him, including Queen Victoria. Before long, Charley made Barnum, his own parents and himself very rich. The highlight of his career was his marriage to another little person, Lavinia. The images of that wedding captured the world’s attention during the trying times of the Civil War, and many years later, captivated Sullivan as well.

Cybils notes:  The end probably went on a bit to long after Tom’s death. The story of Lavinia, Tom’s widow, was rather anticlimactic after his death. Also, there were some inconsistencies, such as why Charley was a spendthrift as a child, yet his wife reported that he had wasted their money at the end. Had he changed that much or was it she who spent their money?

Tom Thumb: The Remarkable True Story of a Man in Miniature is a lively biography of an extraordinary person. It raises many questions about issues such as exploitation and celebrity, and would be a wonderful book for a book club discussion.

It is nominated for a 2011 Cybils award in the MG/YA nonfiction category.

Laurie Thompson has a wonderful review of the book and an interview with George Sullivan.

Another review at The Fourth Musketeteer

Reading level: Ages 10 and up
Hardcover: 208 pages
Publisher: Clarion Books; None edition (April 11, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0547182031
ISBN-13: 978-0547182032

Book was provided for Cybils review by the publisher.