Living Color | Steve Jenkins | Mommy, why is that frog red?
books:
Living Color
Living Color
Steve Jenkins
Houghton Mifflin
, 2007 - 32 pages
average customer review:
based on 2 reviews
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Red, blue, yellow, green, orange, purple, pink?animals can be startlingly
color
ful. Why are they found in so many shades, tints, and hues? From the scarlet ibis to the blue-tongued skink, award-winning author/illustrator Steve Jenkins depicts a whole world of colorful animals in his signature style.
Living
Color explores a range of animals from old favorites like the pink flamingo to rare and fascinating creatures such as the long-wattled umbrella bird and the ringed caecilian. How do the brilliant feathers, scales,shells, and skin of these animals help them survive? Find out in this strikingly beautiful book how animals use color to warn predators, signal friends, attract a mate, or hide from their enemies.
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Beautiful Read
I first saw this book at the library. I picked it up and was immediately struck. This book is beautiful. Going through various
color
s, Steve Jenkins, illustrates and describes animals that are that color. The illustrations made me take notice, but within minutes I found myself reading the entries, one after another. The book is a great read and introduced me to many animals that I was unaware of, and it did so in a fun way that most children can appreciate.
Mommy, why is that frog red?
A cool natural history book, geared for slightly older kids... Jenkins groups wildly different animals by
color
-- blue dart frogs along with hyacinth macaws and blue-tailed skinks, etc. -- and explains how each animal uses their distinctive coloring as an adaptive or defensive trait. There's a lot of tooth-and-claw action here: most of this stuff has to do either with killing prey, avoiding being eaten, or finding a mate. There's also a lot of text -- each of the dozens of animals being profiled gets a little explanatory paragraph next to their picture. The artwork is beautiful (if you like this book, you might also want to check out Jenkins' earlier work, "Biggest, Strongest, Fastest") and there's tons of great zoological information. Just the thing for a budding naturalist to pore over for years to come. (ReadThatAgain!)
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