The author of the cosmic Your Place in the Universe (2020) takes a similarly expansive thought journey in the opposite direction.
Once again Chin goes in scale-changing stages. The 8-centimeter-long Calliope hummingbird that lights on the finger of a delighted brown-skinned child who uses a wheelchair seems tiny. It’s a giant, though, next to the Western Pygmy Blue butterfly (smaller than a penny), which towers over a less than 2-millimeter-long bee…which lands next to a vellus hair, less than 30 microns across, on the child’s skin, and so on down to and into cells, past DNA and its constituent molecules to quarks and gluons—which, Chin writes with some understatement, “aren’t like any objects we are familiar with.” But, he concludes, those same elementary particles make up all the physical matter in the universe, from galaxies to hummingbirds to humans. Particularly in the microbial realms but really throughout, the art’s evocative detailing and dynamic compositions create vivid impressions of realism and movement that will carry viewers down to the point where size and location lose their meanings and then back around to the wide-eyed young observer. Retracing part of his route in the backmatter, the author enriches a summary discussion of life’s building blocks with a chart of elementary particles and the periodic table of elements. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Another fantastic voyage from an accomplished author/illustrator, creatively presented.
(note, selected sources) (Informational picture book. 8-10)