by Roopa Farooki ; illustrated by Viola Wang ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 28, 2025
Positive and energetic, if just a quick slice of the basics.
An elementary guide to our most complicated organ and its functions.
Nurture (experience) beats nature (genetics) in this colorful anatomical overview. Along with providing fanciful schematic portraits of the lumpy organ itself, Wang unleashes a diverse set of children energetically playing or posing amid abundant sprays of tiny images meant to represent “the thrilling thoughts” and “magical memories…that make you YOU.” Still, if Farooki is not as entertaining as the drooling zombie tour guide of Stacy McAnulty’s Brains! (2021), her experience as a medical doctor brings some authority to her pithy descriptions of what each major brain part does, from cerebellum and hippocampus to limbic system, as well as to her general advice about keeping brains properly fed, rested, protected, and stimulated. Readers interested in more advanced topics, such as brain disorders or differences, or in getting past what nerves do, to some explanation of how they actually do it, will have to look elsewhere. Still, the author does occasionally go beyond simple functions to touch on more complicated processes, such as how brains multitask, where researchers have shown feelings are generated in the brain (except for shyness, which seems to be a puzzler), and the differences between long- and short-term memory.
Positive and energetic, if just a quick slice of the basics. (Informational picture book. 6-8)Pub Date: Jan. 28, 2025
ISBN: 9781536237801
Page Count: 32
Publisher: Candlewick
Review Posted Online: Sept. 14, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2024
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by Kari Lavelle ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 11, 2023
A gleeful game for budding naturalists.
Artfully cropped animal portraits challenge viewers to guess which end they’re seeing.
In what will be a crowd-pleasing and inevitably raucous guessing game, a series of close-up stock photos invite children to call out one of the titular alternatives. A page turn reveals answers and basic facts about each creature backed up by more of the latter in a closing map and table. Some of the posers, like the tail of an okapi or the nose on a proboscis monkey, are easy enough to guess—but the moist nose on a star-nosed mole really does look like an anus, and the false “eyes” on the hind ends of a Cuyaba dwarf frog and a Promethea moth caterpillar will fool many. Better yet, Lavelle saves a kicker for the finale with a glimpse of a small parasitical pearlfish peeking out of a sea cucumber’s rear so that the answer is actually face and butt. “Animal identification can be tricky!” she concludes, noting that many of the features here function as defenses against attack: “In the animal world, sometimes your butt will save your face and your face just might save your butt!” (This book was reviewed digitally.)
A gleeful game for budding naturalists. (author’s note) (Informational picture book. 6-8)Pub Date: July 11, 2023
ISBN: 9781728271170
Page Count: 40
Publisher: Sourcebooks eXplore
Review Posted Online: May 9, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2023
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by Kari Lavelle ; illustrated by Bryan Collier
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by Kari Lavelle ; illustrated by Nabi H. Ali
by Dalai Lama & Desmond Tutu ; illustrated by Rafael López ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 27, 2022
Hundreds of pages of unbridled uplift boiled down to 40.
From two Nobel Peace Prize winners, an invitation to look past sadness and loneliness to the joy that surrounds us.
Bobbing in the wake of 2016’s heavyweight Book of Joy (2016), this brief but buoyant address to young readers offers an earnest insight: “If you just focus on the thing that is making / you sad, then the sadness is all you see. / But if you look around, you will / see that joy is everywhere.” López expands the simply delivered proposal in fresh and lyrical ways—beginning with paired scenes of the authors as solitary children growing up in very different circumstances on (as they put it) “opposite sides of the world,” then meeting as young friends bonded by streams of rainbow bunting and going on to share their exuberantly hued joy with a group of dancers diverse in terms of age, race, culture, and locale while urging readers to do the same. Though on the whole this comes off as a bit bland (the banter and hilarity that characterized the authors’ recorded interchanges are absent here) and their advice just to look away from the sad things may seem facile in view of what too many children are inescapably faced with, still, it’s hard to imagine anyone in the world more qualified to deliver such a message than these two. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Hundreds of pages of unbridled uplift boiled down to 40. (Picture book. 6-8)Pub Date: Sept. 27, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-593-48423-4
Page Count: 40
Publisher: Crown
Review Posted Online: Aug. 30, 2022
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2022
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