![]() ![]() ![]() "About this title" may belong to another edition of this title. Carolyn PhelanĬopyright © American Library Association. Like others in the Nature: A Child's Eye View series, this excellent science picture book was originally published in Japan. The Good: The book begins with asking the reader, what am I 'A ball No, not a ball.' And since I had just finished Duck & Goose, which involves mistaking a ball for an egg, I was very amused. One series of pictures shows what happens when a pill bug encounters an ant, allowing even nonreaders to "read" what happens: the pill bug curls into a hard ball to ward off the ant's attack. Read 8 reviews from the worlds largest community for readers. Im A Pill Bug by Yukihisa Tokuda, illustrated by Kiyoshi Takahasi The Plot: A non-fiction book about the pill bug. Meanwhile, handsome cut-paper collages re-create the pill bugs' world in realistic yet simplified terms. The final pages describe how to find pill bugs, touch them, and even keep one indoors as a guest before putting it back, since "He'll want to be with his family during the cold winter!" The lucid, matter-of-fact text answers the main questions children may have about the critters as well as some they might not have thought to ask. In an easy-to-follow, conversational style, he explains what pill bugs eat and excrete, why they live near people, how they protect themselves against predators, why they shed and then eat their shells ("Yum! Very nutritious"), how they reproduce, and more. In this picture book, a pill bug narrates a fascinating account of life among his humble yet admirable fellow crustaceans. ![]() ![]() Many children know pill bugs as roly-polies and think of them as insects. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |