Kirkus Reviews QR Code
CREEK CRITTERS by Jennifer Keats Curtis

CREEK CRITTERS

by Jennifer Keats Curtis ; illustrated by Phyllis V. Saroff

Pub Date: March 10th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-64-351748-3
Publisher: Arbordale Publishing

A girl shows her younger brother how the bugs they find in their creek tell them whether their creek is clean and healthy.

The narrator, a girl of color, lies on the bank of a creek with her little brother, who catches leaves from the water with a stick. She proposes investigating “how bugs can tell a story of clean water.” They run to their house and “grab the same tools that scientists use: rubber boots, a net, a bucket, and small paintbrushes.” They run back to the water and playfully explore its different parts. The narrator tells readers in a simple, expository present-tense what a riffle and a pool are and why the presence of “aquatic macroinvertebrates” shows that water is healthy. They find a dragonfly nymph, a water penny, a mayfly nymph, and a caddisfly larva as they pick up rocks and sift through leaf packs. Their process of careful inquiry is as informative as their findings in this instructive exploration of a natural habitat. The text is rendered in a large font, good for precocious readers, and the pictures combine painted line drawings of the children and the environment with clear, enlarged images of the invertebrates in question. The backmatter includes drawings of additional macroinvertebrates, a field-notebook page, a life cycle matching activity, and a link to online quizzes and games.

A handy companion for outdoor exploration.

(Informational picture book. 5-10)