Animals Books
Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->School Time-->Science-->Living Things-->Animals-->37
Related Subjects: Birds Reptiles and Amphibians Marine Life Mammals Endangered Species Invertebrates
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Related Subjects: Birds Reptiles and Amphibians Marine Life Mammals Endangered Species Invertebrates
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Animals Books sorted by
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Danger: The Dog Yard Cat (Discoveries in Palaeontology)
Published in Paperback by Sasquatch Books/Paws IV Children's Books (2002-01-11)
List price: $9.95
New price: $5.30
Used price: $0.04
Collectible price: $10.00
Used price: $0.04
Collectible price: $10.00
Average review score: 

From a "former child" now 18 years old...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-22
Review Date: 2003-01-22
Jasmine at Ashley River EL.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-20
Review Date: 2000-10-20
Danger the Yard Dog Cat was Dangerously Extreme. It is about a cat named Danger & he lives with 57 Huskies! Thanks for the autograph, Shelley Gill.
Jamie at Ashley River El.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-11
Review Date: 2000-10-11
I give this book four stars. It`s great and really funny! I don`t give it five stars because it is too easy for me. It should be for kids ages 4-6. I recommend this book for kids who like cats.
Daniel @ Ashley River El.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-11
Review Date: 2000-10-11
I like the book Danger the Dog Yard Cat. I recommend this book to you because it tells you about a cat that raced in the Iditarod. The pictures are funny. This book is half true and half make believe. This book is about a cat that gets saved by a dog sled racer that has a lot of dogs. The Cat has to race for the dog leader because he hurt his paw. Danger had one friend that was a dog, and his name was Mud shark.
Kathleen at Ashley River El.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-20
Review Date: 2000-10-20
Danger the Dog Yard Cat was one of the best books I've ever read because it's funny with a very catchy ending. Shelley Gill is funny and cool.

Down to the Sea with Mr. Magee
Published in Hardcover by Chronicle Books (2000-02-01)
List price: $14.95
New price: $14.92
Used price: $2.09
Used price: $2.09
Average review score: 

Illustrations are fabulous!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-14
Review Date: 2008-06-14
I love Chris Van Deusen's books! The story is cute, the wording is poetic, and the illustrations are so vivid and intricate! My daughter and I have read each of his books more than 100 times and we still find little animals or objects subtly added into the drawings. I anxiously await another book from him!
Great book, fun to read aloud!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-26
Review Date: 2008-03-26
This is a great read-aloud book. The illustrations are wonderful and the story is a lot of fun. I love that the whale makes right his wrong in the end of the story! I hope Van Dusen writes more books, my kids just love them.
Humorous
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-31
Review Date: 2007-12-31
I first read the book, A Camping Spree with Mr. Magee. How much my 5 year old loved this book prompted me to look for others by this author. If I had to choose, I would pick Camping Spree over this one, but this book is just as cute and fun to read as the other.
Thank you Chris Van Dusen!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-05
Review Date: 2007-09-05
We checked out one Chris Van Dusen book (A Camping Spree with Mr. Magee) at our local library and wanted more. We love his "retro" illustrations and his clever rhymes. Our kids ask to read this book over and over again. It is a cute story, told and illustrated well.
MaGee and Dee, forever with me
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-13
Review Date: 2007-03-13
This is a beautiful book with Seussian rhyming text, and appeals to children of all ages, and young boys in particular. The rhyming text helps children who have difficulty reading stay engaged. There is so much to look at in the illustrations, and grownups interested in the color palette and trappings of the 1950s will find all of Van Dusens books welcome additions to their children's book library. This one will never go in the giveaway pile - you'll want to keep it forever.

The Dragonology Handbook: A Practical Course in Dragons (Ologies)
Published in Hardcover by Candlewick (2005-04-12)
List price: $12.99
New price: $5.49
Used price: $4.98
Used price: $4.98
Average review score: 

DRAGONOLOGY
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-04
Review Date: 2008-03-04
this is a great source and reference book for drawing dragons.
it's also extremely cool for little kids and big kids alike.
it's also extremely cool for little kids and big kids alike.
1939Ivan
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
Review Date: 2008-01-07
Good book. Some what hard to read and understand in certain areas but very interesting.
Dragonology
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-17
Review Date: 2007-03-17
This is a great book. I loved it but it was very short for the price I paid.
A huge hit with 8-12 year olds
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-07
Review Date: 2007-01-07
My son and his friends are nuts about the dragonology series. This handbook has stickers, puzzles, lore, and fantastic illustrations. The entire book is made to appear as a relic from 1893. I love the "oath of a dragonologist" included in the front. My son very earnestly inscribed his name here: "I ___ ___ do solemnly swear to conserve and protect those dragons that still remain and in no way to harm them or reveal their secret hiding places to those who do not believe in them or would wish them anything other than good fortune." It's a real treat!
Fantastic!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
Review Date: 2007-01-05
Great for kids with a great imagination. My son has all of the book created by this author and loves them all!
Ferdinand the Bull
Published in Misc. Supplies by Merrymakers Distribution (1997-06)
List price: $15.00
Average review score: 

Buy the book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-15
Review Date: 2007-01-15
I absolutely LOVE this story. I remember my grandma reading it to me when I was little and I bought it for my son and he loves it too. There are lots of morals in the story, many of them mentioned by previous reviewers: 1. it's okay to be who you are, 2. don't allow others to bait you into aggressive behavior, 3. perceptions of situations are colored by one's own unique perspective, and of course 4. take time to smell the flowers and just enjoy being in the moment. Everyone I know who has read this story is just as much in love with it as I am. The illustrations are great too.
Yes, this is the same as The Story of Ferdinand.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-25
Review Date: 2006-10-25
I knew the story as Ferdinand the Bull as a kid and it is the same as The Story of Ferdinand. Same author, same story but there is an added author in the new title giving credit to the illustrator as well. My Mom was an elementary school librarian and of all the books available to us this was one of my top five I'm sure. It does appear that there may be both a color illustrated and (original?) pen and ink version available in the new title. Not really sure...
Uncle Mun was a great guy
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-08
Review Date: 2006-10-08
Munro Leaf was my grandparents' next door neighbor in CT and I remember fondly my early years with he and his wife (I called him Uncle Mun). Unfortunately, Mun died when I was still fairly young but not before he left a deep impresssion on me. I of course had many of his books growing up, with personal notes that demonstrated his interest in my growth and well-being. He also illustrated each of his notes. I cherish those books to this day. My favorite was Ferdinand the Bull; a close second, Wee Gillis. What a guy!!!
Ferdinand the Bull
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-22
Review Date: 2003-05-22
This is my childrens' all time favorite book. Ferdinand is the best bull ever, he's gentle and brave at the same time. He sets a wonderful example for a person (or in this case bull) to be comfortable in one's own skin. Please get this book back in print!
Ferdinand the Bull
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-19
Review Date: 2001-08-19
Ferdinand the Bull not only has an inspirational message for me, but means a great deal as Ferdinand is my maiden name. My brother and I, as we grew up in Pa., had this read to us and then read it ourselves and loved hearing it over and over. I shared it with my children and I hope that they will reprint it so that our grandchildren may enjoy it, as well. Jane Ferdinand Royer, Southlake, TX.
Freddy the Detective
Published in Library Binding by Alfred A. Knopf (1932-09)
List price: $6.39
Used price: $2.25
Average review score: 

Freddy the Detective is a great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-30
Review Date: 2007-05-30
Freddy the Detective is about a pig called Freddy who reads Sherlock Holmes and wants to become a detective. The first case starts when the boy who lives in the farmhouse loses his train of cars. Freddy is on the case right away. He goes up to the boy's room and finds clues to who has stolen the cars. He finds out it is the rats, who have come back to the barn. Soon more cases have come up for him to solve, including when Egbert, a bunny, goes missing from his mother, and when Prinny, a little dog, has her dinner go missing.
I enjoyed this book because I like funny stories, and this was very funny. I also enjoyed it because I don't usually read mysteries, and this made me more interested in detective stories. Freddy is very funny in the way he solves cases. I recommend reading this book, even if you don't usually read mysteries. It is a great detective book for anyone who enjoys reading.
I enjoyed this book because I like funny stories, and this was very funny. I also enjoyed it because I don't usually read mysteries, and this made me more interested in detective stories. Freddy is very funny in the way he solves cases. I recommend reading this book, even if you don't usually read mysteries. It is a great detective book for anyone who enjoys reading.
Good.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-08
Review Date: 2006-09-08
Wonerful, Triumph, for all ages.
It tips my planet, shakes my world.
Caleb A. Craig
It tips my planet, shakes my world.
Caleb A. Craig
"I've got good brains, but they aren't the kind that think easily."
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-11
Review Date: 2005-12-11
The second in the utterly charming "Freddy the Pig" series, "Freddy the Detective" chronicles the adventures of Freddy and his barnyard friends as they delve deep into the world of clues, suspects and the criminal world. In the great tradition of Sherlock Holmes, there is a disguise involved.
Cases are solved (like just what becomes of Prinny the dog's dinner), a jail is constructed to house all the freshly-caught criminals (who have more fun inside than out) , and in the ultimate test for a pig, some infamous bank-robbers are caught red-handed and carted away by the thankful police. It all culminates in the trail of Jinx the Cat, during which a hen faints dead away at the mention of roast chicken and the courthouse erupts in cheers at the end of the summation because they admire they way the attorney argued a hopelessly weak case.
The Freddy books are great fun for kids (boy or girl), and they won't put you to sleep reading them aloud, either. I would place them just below the Betsy/Tacy books and the work of Leon Garfield, and high above anything coming out nowadays. They do nicely as a comfort during stressful times, the gentle and goofy stories easing kids to sleep. Highly recommended for ages to 5 to 100.
GRADE: B
Cases are solved (like just what becomes of Prinny the dog's dinner), a jail is constructed to house all the freshly-caught criminals (who have more fun inside than out) , and in the ultimate test for a pig, some infamous bank-robbers are caught red-handed and carted away by the thankful police. It all culminates in the trail of Jinx the Cat, during which a hen faints dead away at the mention of roast chicken and the courthouse erupts in cheers at the end of the summation because they admire they way the attorney argued a hopelessly weak case.
The Freddy books are great fun for kids (boy or girl), and they won't put you to sleep reading them aloud, either. I would place them just below the Betsy/Tacy books and the work of Leon Garfield, and high above anything coming out nowadays. They do nicely as a comfort during stressful times, the gentle and goofy stories easing kids to sleep. Highly recommended for ages to 5 to 100.
GRADE: B
A Very Smart Pig
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-15
Review Date: 2005-04-15
Freddy the Detective is one of a series of pig books written by Walter R Brooks. Freddy the cool detective is a master of disguise who helps Mr. Bean and the Bean Farm solve crime.
Freddy the Detective is one of my favorite books because I love pigs and the main character is a very smart pig. The book is exciting and fun to read. I recommend it for people who like pigs! You will love the book if you read it.
Lukas
Freddy the Detective is one of my favorite books because I love pigs and the main character is a very smart pig. The book is exciting and fun to read. I recommend it for people who like pigs! You will love the book if you read it.
Lukas
Some pig
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-17
Review Date: 2005-11-17
I run a bookgroup for homeschoolers and have the very great pleasure of introducing this bunch of alternative education kiddies to some of the great classics in children's literature. It can be a very rewarding experience. Once in a while, however, the kids teach me about books that I've never heard of. One of the children I organize has been obsessed with the "Freddy" books for years. Occasionally he would ask me if I had read them or he'd promote them to the group. In my initial ignorance, I assumed that he was referring to the Freddy the Hamster books by Dietlof Reiche. Those books are very good but the kid was actually referring to the classic Freddy the Pig series dating back to the 1930s. Recently these books have been earning themselves an entirely new audience and children everywhere are engulfed in a kind of newfangled Freddy fever. I picked up "Freddy the Detective" (not realizing that "Freddy In Florida" is actually the first book in the series) to give the books a look-see. I did this with a kind of snide attitude that went something along the lines of, "well I'm sure these books have aged poorly over the years and that the only reason kids are reading them because their parents made them". Oh how wrong a children's librarian can be. The Freddy books are marvelous. Author Walter R. Brooks is marvelous. In fact, "Freddy the Detective" is so wry, well-written, and delightful that I am truly shocked that more people are not aware of this series. Consider me a convert of the pig. One who will be singing his praises to the masses every chance I get.
Freddy is just your average highly intelligent pig. He lives on the farm of Mr. and Mrs. Bean and has a lovely little life. He has a fine library in his pen and it is from his books that he gets the idea to become a detective. After reading a couple Sherlock Holmes stories, Freddy is sure that he can pull off becoming the farm's number one crime-ridder. This decision is made not a moment too soon, for a nasty clan of rats has stolen a valuable toy train from the Bean home and is performing dastardly crimes with it. As we follow Freddy, he solves crime after crime and participates in adventure after adventure. When Jinx the cat is ultimately framed for a crime he did not commit, it's up to Freddy to sway a jury of his peers as to the feline's innocence and the true criminals in the case.
One of the first things that caught my attention in this book was the lack of human/animal interaction. For kids that grew up reading that other classic farm text, "Charlotte's Web", the fact that there are two kids on the Bean farm that never ever appear in the book is downright bizarre. In any other story we'd be getting everything from the children's point of view. Brooks, however, knows who the true star of his book is and he's not going to muddle the action with a couple of pesky young 'uns hogging (ho ho!) the spotlight. Another interesting choice comes with the fact that the humans and the animals on the farm cannot talk to one another. This makes quite a bit of sense, when you consider it. Animals have no vocal cords. Animals also don't usually use their hoofs like hands, but that's neither here nor there. The point is that humans and animals have their own fixed roles in Brooks' world, and for kids this is very easy to understand.
But it's the writing of Walter Brooks that has made this series as memorable as it is today. He continually peppers his books with songs and rhymes that not only pan out correctly but are rather clever in their own right. Consider the following:
"Habitually we offend
Against our country's laws.
It works out better in the end
Than being good, because -
No home has a superior
Or cheerier interior
Than this old jail
The which we hail
With constant loud applause".
Nicely done, eh? Better still are the 1930s turns of phrase and common references long since lost to the annals of time. In one section the children reading this book are urged to sing "Aunt Laurie" as fast as they possibly can. If a single child in this country knows both words and tune, I'll be amazed. In another instance a chapter title is simply, "Jinx is indicted", which I thought was great. And opposite the title page is a picture of Freddy falling down a flight of stairs backwards (as occurs later in the book) with the caption, "- but at that moment Freddy came to grief". Obviously the publisher of this book found that turn of phrase just as charming as I did. Well done there, Puffin Books. Paired with these words are German illustrator Kurt Wiese's original pen and inks. Known almost entirely for illustrating books with Asian themes (he won a Newbery for his illustrations in "Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze", for example), Wiese eschews his normal style in favor of this most American of tales. His animals are both deeply familiar and oh-so-slightly human. There is not a picture in this book that jars with the action or distracts from the words. The pairing of Wiese with Brooks can only be described as heavenly.
I was a little afraid when I picked up this book (and took a gander at its copyright date) that we'd have to deal with a fair amount of sexism and racism in this book. To my somewhat naïve shock, no such prejudice pops up. In fact, Brooks could even be credited with breaking down a few barriers here and there. Female characters do just as much good as male ones in Freddy's world. Freddy comes to realize early in the game that while there is no end to his cleverness, he's rather lacking in the common sense department. By partnering with the down-to-earth cow Mrs. Wiggins, however, the two are able to combine their equal strengths and solve any number of crimes.
I haven't even mentioned the clever things Brooks has to say about our legal system or the state of law enforcement itself. You'll just have to discover them on your own as you read through what can certainly be called a true children's classic for the ages. A marvelous and deserves-to-be-remembered tale.
Freddy is just your average highly intelligent pig. He lives on the farm of Mr. and Mrs. Bean and has a lovely little life. He has a fine library in his pen and it is from his books that he gets the idea to become a detective. After reading a couple Sherlock Holmes stories, Freddy is sure that he can pull off becoming the farm's number one crime-ridder. This decision is made not a moment too soon, for a nasty clan of rats has stolen a valuable toy train from the Bean home and is performing dastardly crimes with it. As we follow Freddy, he solves crime after crime and participates in adventure after adventure. When Jinx the cat is ultimately framed for a crime he did not commit, it's up to Freddy to sway a jury of his peers as to the feline's innocence and the true criminals in the case.
One of the first things that caught my attention in this book was the lack of human/animal interaction. For kids that grew up reading that other classic farm text, "Charlotte's Web", the fact that there are two kids on the Bean farm that never ever appear in the book is downright bizarre. In any other story we'd be getting everything from the children's point of view. Brooks, however, knows who the true star of his book is and he's not going to muddle the action with a couple of pesky young 'uns hogging (ho ho!) the spotlight. Another interesting choice comes with the fact that the humans and the animals on the farm cannot talk to one another. This makes quite a bit of sense, when you consider it. Animals have no vocal cords. Animals also don't usually use their hoofs like hands, but that's neither here nor there. The point is that humans and animals have their own fixed roles in Brooks' world, and for kids this is very easy to understand.
But it's the writing of Walter Brooks that has made this series as memorable as it is today. He continually peppers his books with songs and rhymes that not only pan out correctly but are rather clever in their own right. Consider the following:
"Habitually we offend
Against our country's laws.
It works out better in the end
Than being good, because -
No home has a superior
Or cheerier interior
Than this old jail
The which we hail
With constant loud applause".
Nicely done, eh? Better still are the 1930s turns of phrase and common references long since lost to the annals of time. In one section the children reading this book are urged to sing "Aunt Laurie" as fast as they possibly can. If a single child in this country knows both words and tune, I'll be amazed. In another instance a chapter title is simply, "Jinx is indicted", which I thought was great. And opposite the title page is a picture of Freddy falling down a flight of stairs backwards (as occurs later in the book) with the caption, "- but at that moment Freddy came to grief". Obviously the publisher of this book found that turn of phrase just as charming as I did. Well done there, Puffin Books. Paired with these words are German illustrator Kurt Wiese's original pen and inks. Known almost entirely for illustrating books with Asian themes (he won a Newbery for his illustrations in "Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze", for example), Wiese eschews his normal style in favor of this most American of tales. His animals are both deeply familiar and oh-so-slightly human. There is not a picture in this book that jars with the action or distracts from the words. The pairing of Wiese with Brooks can only be described as heavenly.
I was a little afraid when I picked up this book (and took a gander at its copyright date) that we'd have to deal with a fair amount of sexism and racism in this book. To my somewhat naïve shock, no such prejudice pops up. In fact, Brooks could even be credited with breaking down a few barriers here and there. Female characters do just as much good as male ones in Freddy's world. Freddy comes to realize early in the game that while there is no end to his cleverness, he's rather lacking in the common sense department. By partnering with the down-to-earth cow Mrs. Wiggins, however, the two are able to combine their equal strengths and solve any number of crimes.
I haven't even mentioned the clever things Brooks has to say about our legal system or the state of law enforcement itself. You'll just have to discover them on your own as you read through what can certainly be called a true children's classic for the ages. A marvelous and deserves-to-be-remembered tale.

Hope Is the Thing with Feathers: A Personal Chronicle of Vanished Birds
Published in Paperback by Tarcher (2000-03-20)
List price: $24.95
New price: $12.75
Used price: $0.71
Used price: $0.71
Average review score: 

Wow.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-06
Review Date: 2006-04-06
Wow, this is an amazing book. I bought it last April, and was reading the section on the Ivory-Bill when I found out that it was rediscovered. But, this book is simply amazing. If only more people would read and be inspired by this book, then, maybe, there wouldn't be as much of a problem with the enviorment.
The Lives and Demises of 6 Extinct North American Bird Species.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-24
Review Date: 2005-11-24
"Hope is the Thing with Feathers" profiles 6 North American bird species that are now extinct: the Carolina Parakeet, Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, Heath Hen, Passenger Pigeon, Labrador Duck (Sand Shoal Duck), and the Great Auk. Most of these species became extinct -or were presumed to be extinct in the case of the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker- in the early 20th century, although the Labrador Duck and Great Auk disappeared in the 19th century with less documentation. Author Christopher Cokinos takes the reader on his personal journey to learn about these birds and shares with us all that he finds. He discusses where these species were, what the birds ate, what is known of how they behaved, why they became extinct -which is not always clear, and the people who studied them. Of particular interest to me are the detailed accounts of the last living birds of these species, some of whom were closely observed.
I was surprised to learn that humans did try to protect most of these species at some point before they were wiped out. It was often a case of too little too late, but the disturbing thing is that legislation designed to protect the birds was sometimes passed with time to spare but was not adequately enforced. It isn't as if the extinctions took people by surprise. The greatest threat to the birds was loss of habitat, i.e. logging of old growth forests, but disease, politics and hunting played their parts. How extraordinary that the ubiquitous passenger pigeon, once the most populous bird in the world at a frightening 3-5 billion, up to 2 billion in a single flock, could be completely wiped out in about 50 years due to overhunting and loss of mast-producing forests. Even those familiar with the passenger pigeon's demise will find some new information here. Christopher Cokinos has dug up and verified the details of the shooting of the last wild passenger pigeon by Press Clay Southworth in 1900, including an account in Mr. Southworth's own written words.
I wish there were more photographs of the lovely Carolina Parakeet, but the 2 photos that are included are truly engaging. It's astonishing that this bright, affectionate, adorable parrot that could easily be bred in captivity was allowed to die out. If profit could not coax anyone to breed the birds for the pet trade, the degree of apathy is incomprehensible. I have often read that the Carolina Parakeet was hunted to extinction by farmers protecting their crops, but Cokinos takes issue with that claim, asserting that the major cause was habitat loss, but why the species died out entirely seems to be a mystery. "Hope Is the Thing with Feathers" is an evocative and informative chronicle of 6 North American bird species that are no more, some of which were quite common in their day. It must have been remarkable to look out the window and see a flock of shimmering green Carolina Parakeets in the trees -in the dead of winter, no less!
I was surprised to learn that humans did try to protect most of these species at some point before they were wiped out. It was often a case of too little too late, but the disturbing thing is that legislation designed to protect the birds was sometimes passed with time to spare but was not adequately enforced. It isn't as if the extinctions took people by surprise. The greatest threat to the birds was loss of habitat, i.e. logging of old growth forests, but disease, politics and hunting played their parts. How extraordinary that the ubiquitous passenger pigeon, once the most populous bird in the world at a frightening 3-5 billion, up to 2 billion in a single flock, could be completely wiped out in about 50 years due to overhunting and loss of mast-producing forests. Even those familiar with the passenger pigeon's demise will find some new information here. Christopher Cokinos has dug up and verified the details of the shooting of the last wild passenger pigeon by Press Clay Southworth in 1900, including an account in Mr. Southworth's own written words.
I wish there were more photographs of the lovely Carolina Parakeet, but the 2 photos that are included are truly engaging. It's astonishing that this bright, affectionate, adorable parrot that could easily be bred in captivity was allowed to die out. If profit could not coax anyone to breed the birds for the pet trade, the degree of apathy is incomprehensible. I have often read that the Carolina Parakeet was hunted to extinction by farmers protecting their crops, but Cokinos takes issue with that claim, asserting that the major cause was habitat loss, but why the species died out entirely seems to be a mystery. "Hope Is the Thing with Feathers" is an evocative and informative chronicle of 6 North American bird species that are no more, some of which were quite common in their day. It must have been remarkable to look out the window and see a flock of shimmering green Carolina Parakeets in the trees -in the dead of winter, no less!
A wonderful book - definitely required reading
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-11-07
Review Date: 2002-11-07
Although it chronicles several chapters of bull-headed human stupidity, this book also documents the painstaking efforts of the many people who worked hard to save these vanished creatures, and offers some hope that the future need not repeat the past. At times sad, but also funny, and even joyful despite the material.
Excellent coverage of six amazing birds
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-25
Review Date: 2004-12-25
In _Hope is the Thing with Feathers_ (the title is taken from a line in an Emily Dickinson poem), author Christopher Cokinos sought to relay some of the natural and human history of six vanished birds of North America.
The first bird he examined is the Carolina Parakeet, once a relatively common bird that ranged in noisy flocks across the eastern U.S., north to Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, and New York, south to the Gulf Coast states, west to Kansas, Nebraska, and eastern Colorado. This bird with a "luminous plumage of green, yellow and red" frequented wooded rivers and bottomlands. Once a delight to many Americans the birds unfortunately were persecuted as a threat to crops, for the caged bird industry, and for the demands of women's fashion. Cokinos suggested though that the main cause for its extinction was habitat destruction. Two related theories of extinction were that the thick bamboo canebrakes once common in the bird's range were mostly cleared out for farmland. In addition to providing food, the bamboo may have given a vital breeding stimulus to the bird (as like bamboo, the parakeets apparently did not breed each year). The second theory is that the bird may have been denied the hollow trees it required for roosting and nesting by the rapid spread across the continent by the European honeybee.
Next Cokinos had a lengthy section on the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, once known as the Lord God Bird (presumably because observers would blurt "Lord God!" when they spied the nearly two foot long bird with the two and a half foot wingspan). Once the second largest woodpecker in the world (Mexico's Imperial Woodpecker is larger) it ranged across bottomland forests and swamps in the South, west to eastern Texas, north to Missouri, southern Illinois, southern Indiana, and southern Ohio. Though hunted (later largely by collectors, shooting it in fact because they were going extinct), the bird appears to have perished due to habitat destruction. An extreme specialist, it occupied a niche "almost as slender as a feather;" it primarily fed upon beetle larvae from trees that had only been dead for two or three years. Though they also included seeds and fruits in their diets, they became extremely site dependent on places that yielded the larvae that they favored. Interesting coverage of the Brand-Cornell University-American Museum of Natural History Ornithological Expedition led by Arthur Allen that set out in 1935 on a 15,000 mile scientific expedition to record the sounds of wild birds using brand new technology - one of the places they visited was the Singer Tract in Louisiana where news came out that the last Ivory-bills were found; and the bitter (and lost) fight to save the Singer Tract from destruction by loggers.
Next Cokinos examined the Heath Hen, an extinct subspecies of Greater Prairie Chicken. The bird once favored dry, brushy habitat with low trees as well as meadows from Maine to the Carolinas (though primarily from New Jersey up to Connecticut and Massachusetts). Once called by naturalists - along with its western cousin - the pinnated grouse owing to the dangling neck feathers on the males called pinnae - the bird perished on the American mainland by 1870 thanks to loss of habitat due to fire suppression and farming as well as relentless overhunting. The bird survived on the island of Martha's Vineyard and Cokinos covered at length the intense struggle as well as the political infighting over trying to save the bird there. Despite intense hunting of "vermin" (including feral cats, rats, owls, and hawks), planting of crops to feed the Heath Hen, and other efforts, through a run of bad luck the bird finally perished; the last of its kind apparently died in 1932 in the wild, known from close examination to have been an incredibly old male seven to nine years in age (average lifespan in the wild was one year). The author discussed efforts to reintroduce the Greater Prairie Chicken to Martha's Vineyard while highlighting the plight of the possibly doomed Attwater's Prairie-Chicken of Texas and Louisiana, which in 1999 has a total population of 146.
The Passenger Pigeon was the next subject. After impressing upon the reader just how astronomically abundant it once was (one early 1800s flock was estimated to have 2.2 billion birds and a nesting colony in Wisconsin as late as 1871 covered 850 square miles and had 135 million birds), Cokinos related how this bird was systematically destroyed by market hunters, for a time by the cruel trapshooting business (birds were collected to serve as live target practice), and due to habitat clearance (the birds were heavily reliant on the massive amount of mast (nuts) produced by oak, chestnut, and beech trees). The author went into a great deal of detail about the last known wild pigeon ("Buttons," so called because once mounted its eyes were in fact buttons for a time) and the last pigeon period ("Martha" from the Cincinnati Zoo).
A smaller chapter focuses on the Labrador Duck. A handsome sea duck also called the Skunk Duck and Pie or Pied Duck, this somewhat poorly known waterfowl had a large and odd-looking bill that aided the bird in its search for sand-buried shellfish. The range of the bird was the eastern seaboard though where it bred is still open to conjecture. Cokinos and others speculated that the bird - never common to start with - may have perished due to loss of shellfish due to overharvesting and sewage runoff and thanks to increased ice packs from the Little Ice Age (which lasted till the 1850s), which may have interfered with breeding sites and aided some predators.
Cokinos closed with a by comparison slim chapter on the Great Auk, an interesting chapter that could have been a bit longer. I was struck by the long human contact with them - their images have been found in 20,000 year old French cave art and bones in 4,000 old Newfoundland graves - with care they could have survived to today.
The first bird he examined is the Carolina Parakeet, once a relatively common bird that ranged in noisy flocks across the eastern U.S., north to Illinois, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, and New York, south to the Gulf Coast states, west to Kansas, Nebraska, and eastern Colorado. This bird with a "luminous plumage of green, yellow and red" frequented wooded rivers and bottomlands. Once a delight to many Americans the birds unfortunately were persecuted as a threat to crops, for the caged bird industry, and for the demands of women's fashion. Cokinos suggested though that the main cause for its extinction was habitat destruction. Two related theories of extinction were that the thick bamboo canebrakes once common in the bird's range were mostly cleared out for farmland. In addition to providing food, the bamboo may have given a vital breeding stimulus to the bird (as like bamboo, the parakeets apparently did not breed each year). The second theory is that the bird may have been denied the hollow trees it required for roosting and nesting by the rapid spread across the continent by the European honeybee.
Next Cokinos had a lengthy section on the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker, once known as the Lord God Bird (presumably because observers would blurt "Lord God!" when they spied the nearly two foot long bird with the two and a half foot wingspan). Once the second largest woodpecker in the world (Mexico's Imperial Woodpecker is larger) it ranged across bottomland forests and swamps in the South, west to eastern Texas, north to Missouri, southern Illinois, southern Indiana, and southern Ohio. Though hunted (later largely by collectors, shooting it in fact because they were going extinct), the bird appears to have perished due to habitat destruction. An extreme specialist, it occupied a niche "almost as slender as a feather;" it primarily fed upon beetle larvae from trees that had only been dead for two or three years. Though they also included seeds and fruits in their diets, they became extremely site dependent on places that yielded the larvae that they favored. Interesting coverage of the Brand-Cornell University-American Museum of Natural History Ornithological Expedition led by Arthur Allen that set out in 1935 on a 15,000 mile scientific expedition to record the sounds of wild birds using brand new technology - one of the places they visited was the Singer Tract in Louisiana where news came out that the last Ivory-bills were found; and the bitter (and lost) fight to save the Singer Tract from destruction by loggers.
Next Cokinos examined the Heath Hen, an extinct subspecies of Greater Prairie Chicken. The bird once favored dry, brushy habitat with low trees as well as meadows from Maine to the Carolinas (though primarily from New Jersey up to Connecticut and Massachusetts). Once called by naturalists - along with its western cousin - the pinnated grouse owing to the dangling neck feathers on the males called pinnae - the bird perished on the American mainland by 1870 thanks to loss of habitat due to fire suppression and farming as well as relentless overhunting. The bird survived on the island of Martha's Vineyard and Cokinos covered at length the intense struggle as well as the political infighting over trying to save the bird there. Despite intense hunting of "vermin" (including feral cats, rats, owls, and hawks), planting of crops to feed the Heath Hen, and other efforts, through a run of bad luck the bird finally perished; the last of its kind apparently died in 1932 in the wild, known from close examination to have been an incredibly old male seven to nine years in age (average lifespan in the wild was one year). The author discussed efforts to reintroduce the Greater Prairie Chicken to Martha's Vineyard while highlighting the plight of the possibly doomed Attwater's Prairie-Chicken of Texas and Louisiana, which in 1999 has a total population of 146.
The Passenger Pigeon was the next subject. After impressing upon the reader just how astronomically abundant it once was (one early 1800s flock was estimated to have 2.2 billion birds and a nesting colony in Wisconsin as late as 1871 covered 850 square miles and had 135 million birds), Cokinos related how this bird was systematically destroyed by market hunters, for a time by the cruel trapshooting business (birds were collected to serve as live target practice), and due to habitat clearance (the birds were heavily reliant on the massive amount of mast (nuts) produced by oak, chestnut, and beech trees). The author went into a great deal of detail about the last known wild pigeon ("Buttons," so called because once mounted its eyes were in fact buttons for a time) and the last pigeon period ("Martha" from the Cincinnati Zoo).
A smaller chapter focuses on the Labrador Duck. A handsome sea duck also called the Skunk Duck and Pie or Pied Duck, this somewhat poorly known waterfowl had a large and odd-looking bill that aided the bird in its search for sand-buried shellfish. The range of the bird was the eastern seaboard though where it bred is still open to conjecture. Cokinos and others speculated that the bird - never common to start with - may have perished due to loss of shellfish due to overharvesting and sewage runoff and thanks to increased ice packs from the Little Ice Age (which lasted till the 1850s), which may have interfered with breeding sites and aided some predators.
Cokinos closed with a by comparison slim chapter on the Great Auk, an interesting chapter that could have been a bit longer. I was struck by the long human contact with them - their images have been found in 20,000 year old French cave art and bones in 4,000 old Newfoundland graves - with care they could have survived to today.
A hidden gem - - beautiful poetic writing
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-27
Review Date: 2004-10-27
This is a great book.
It's a sad one in realizing the destruction of various bird species. The chronicles of various species during the late 19th/early 20th century are astonishing to read. It was incredible to read and learn of biologists determined to collect species before they vanished - rather than attempt to preserve them.
Particularly entertaining (in an ironic and sick sort of way) was the tale of the last man to shoot the last Passenger Pigeon. The author did an incredible amount of research and weaves a delightful short story worthy of the purchase of this book in itself.
The writing is simple yet incredibly deep; it brings home an important and moving message that can be understood by a variety of audiences - even those who may not be particularly interested in nature, birds or environmental causes. Poetic and beautifully wrapped up. The only troubling portion of the book is the outcome of the fate of these species - obviously not the fault of the author, who provides a hope of preserving "what we still have" - it is moving, nonetheless ...
A wonderful book!!!
It's a sad one in realizing the destruction of various bird species. The chronicles of various species during the late 19th/early 20th century are astonishing to read. It was incredible to read and learn of biologists determined to collect species before they vanished - rather than attempt to preserve them.
Particularly entertaining (in an ironic and sick sort of way) was the tale of the last man to shoot the last Passenger Pigeon. The author did an incredible amount of research and weaves a delightful short story worthy of the purchase of this book in itself.
The writing is simple yet incredibly deep; it brings home an important and moving message that can be understood by a variety of audiences - even those who may not be particularly interested in nature, birds or environmental causes. Poetic and beautifully wrapped up. The only troubling portion of the book is the outcome of the fate of these species - obviously not the fault of the author, who provides a hope of preserving "what we still have" - it is moving, nonetheless ...
A wonderful book!!!
The Jazz Fly
Published in Audio CD by Tortuga Press (2003-06)
List price: $8.95
Average review score: 

Encore! Encore!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-01
Review Date: 2008-09-01
Rock-n-Reading! The Jazz Fly rocks and excites children about reading. I have used this book in class with Pre-K up to fifth grade students. I purchased two copies for my granddaughter. We keep one at her house as well as mine. This soon to be classic has a fun character story as well phonetic skills. It's a great read and tons of fun.
General Music
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
Review Date: 2008-07-02
This book is great for a K-2 general music lesson. It has a great introduction to jazz music and improvisation. All my students wanted to hear more jazz and move to jazz after reading this book. Can also be easily used as a sub lesson, since the whole book is on CD.
Everyone Stops to Listen!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-18
Review Date: 2006-03-18
I first heard the cd that comes with this book when my 5th grade teacher played it in class. Everyone stopped what they were doing to listen even two kids who hardly ever stop talking. My teacher's a drummer and so am I so we LOVED the jazz beat. I read that another reviewer thought the beats were on 1 and 3. Anyone can hear the hi-hat clicking on beats 2 and 4. This is real jazz played by real jazz musicians! (I don't think that reviewer is a musician.) The thing I liked most about The Jazz Fly besides the music, was the illustrations and the way it introduce scat as a kind of language. It IS a language, ZA-BA-ZA-BOO-ZA-BA. Everyone can speak it their own way.
Hippest Book on Jazz for Kids
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-08
Review Date: 2006-03-08
This book is solid! One of the best books on the market today about jazz for young kids. This is the story of a jazz fly who ultimately gigs on drums at a club following his encounters with several other creatures. The fly riffs off their contributions to create his own improvised session. Children love the rhyme scheme and enjoy scatting to the sounds of za ba za boo za ba zee za ro nee ... Read it aloud and children can't resist trying to repeat the syllables in song. The book is sold with a CD that compliments the text and informs the reader on how it should be read aloud rhythmically. I highly recommend this book to anyone who teaches young children or has a child of their own that they want to expose to jazz.
A Great Gift for any Musically Inclined Child
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-30
Review Date: 2006-03-30
I've given several copies of this book/CD as gifts to my friend's children. It's always enthusiastically received.
Most conventional music education seems to ignore jazz, which is puzzling since it is our own music, not a European implant. Matthew Golub has found a way to make the learning process truly enjoyable. The rhythms are infectious; you find yourself singing along with the CD. And the cartoon-like text is fun for children of all ages. This is a book to own, if you have a musically inclined child.
Most conventional music education seems to ignore jazz, which is puzzling since it is our own music, not a European implant. Matthew Golub has found a way to make the learning process truly enjoyable. The rhythms are infectious; you find yourself singing along with the CD. And the cartoon-like text is fun for children of all ages. This is a book to own, if you have a musically inclined child.

Lafcadio : The Lion Who Shot Back
Published in Library Binding by HarperCollins (1963-01-06)
List price: $16.89
New price: $7.00
Used price: $2.83
Collectible price: $16.89
Used price: $2.83
Collectible price: $16.89
Average review score: 

marshmallow coats rule
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-06
Review Date: 2007-04-06
Have you ever felt like you were torn between two worlds? Like, you want to fit in with this one group of new friends but in order to do that you kind of have to leave your old friends behind? Because the new friends and old friends are in way different places? Yeah. Same with Lafcadio.
He wants to be a good lion. He does. But then he gets all wrapped up in the world of humans. And the world of humans is not as simple as the world of lions, is it? No, it is not. So he can do some fun things, like have a marshmallow coat made for him because he just LOVES marshmallows, but life is not all marshmallows and roses. Lafcadio loses his identity. And at the end, he's conflicted about which world is his real home.
This is an awesome story about knowing your true self and being the person (or lion) you know you should be.
He wants to be a good lion. He does. But then he gets all wrapped up in the world of humans. And the world of humans is not as simple as the world of lions, is it? No, it is not. So he can do some fun things, like have a marshmallow coat made for him because he just LOVES marshmallows, but life is not all marshmallows and roses. Lafcadio loses his identity. And at the end, he's conflicted about which world is his real home.
This is an awesome story about knowing your true self and being the person (or lion) you know you should be.
My favorite coming of age gift
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
Review Date: 2008-05-29
"'Make up your mind,' they all said together, and poor Lafcadio the Great, he couldn't make up his mind; he wasn't really a lion anymore, and he certainly wasn't really a man..."
Lafcadio is a wonderful book about trying to figure out who you want to be and then, finally, who you are. I give this to every graduating high school senior who appreciates metaphor.
Lafcadio is a wonderful book about trying to figure out who you want to be and then, finally, who you are. I give this to every graduating high school senior who appreciates metaphor.
wow!
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-08
Review Date: 2005-05-08
I hadn't heard of this book until a few years ago, when I came upon it and read a few pages in the bookstore. WOW!!! Although I appreciate Shel Silverstein's other stories and poems, nothing at all is like this one. And, that's a disappointment, because after reading this one to my children, we wanted MORE.
In my kids' schools, the Giving Tree was always considered such a classic, and praised as such. Lafcadio? Never mentioned! How disappointing, and oh, what those students are missing. Lafcadio isn't even in the school's library catalogue!
Lafcadio tells the story of a lion who comes to the city and becomes a gentleman--losing his lionly ways. But, Shel Silverstein tells this story so hilariously, I can barely read it aloud without laughing hysterically. I used to read this to my son, and literally could not get the words out without laughing uncontrollably. This, of course, caused my son to laugh as heartily without even knowing why. . . begging me to stop laughing and to tell him what was so funny. Lafcadio is an experience, that's for sure!
That said, this isn't a completely gentle book. It's probably the only book I've read to the kids that talked about eating people--and, made eating people funny. However, the unexpected quirkiness of the story is also what made it so hilarious. This is really a classic. Your kids will love it and you will love it.
In my kids' schools, the Giving Tree was always considered such a classic, and praised as such. Lafcadio? Never mentioned! How disappointing, and oh, what those students are missing. Lafcadio isn't even in the school's library catalogue!
Lafcadio tells the story of a lion who comes to the city and becomes a gentleman--losing his lionly ways. But, Shel Silverstein tells this story so hilariously, I can barely read it aloud without laughing hysterically. I used to read this to my son, and literally could not get the words out without laughing uncontrollably. This, of course, caused my son to laugh as heartily without even knowing why. . . begging me to stop laughing and to tell him what was so funny. Lafcadio is an experience, that's for sure!
That said, this isn't a completely gentle book. It's probably the only book I've read to the kids that talked about eating people--and, made eating people funny. However, the unexpected quirkiness of the story is also what made it so hilarious. This is really a classic. Your kids will love it and you will love it.
Creative, captivating and comical...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-15
Review Date: 2004-10-15
This book is about a lion named Lafcadio, who learnt to shoot using a gun and began shooting back at hunters - hence the name of the book! The story started when Lafcadio got hold of a hunter's gun and began learning to shoot. He practiced shooting day and night, and he got better and better as the days go by. He is never short of ammunition. To get more ammunition, he just eats up hunters who come into the jungle !!
Then one day, a man from the circus came and offered him a job in the circus. He accepted it with the condition that he get lots and lots of MARSHMALLOWS !!
So, off goes Lafcadio to the city. At the city, Lafcadio tried many different things. He had a haircut at a barbershop. He had a suit made of MARSHMALLOWS for him. And as the days passes, he came more and more human. He learnt to dance, swim and even bowl..
The story is full of wit. If you are looking for a gift for your little one, I would highly recommend this book!
Then one day, a man from the circus came and offered him a job in the circus. He accepted it with the condition that he get lots and lots of MARSHMALLOWS !!
So, off goes Lafcadio to the city. At the city, Lafcadio tried many different things. He had a haircut at a barbershop. He had a suit made of MARSHMALLOWS for him. And as the days passes, he came more and more human. He learnt to dance, swim and even bowl..
The story is full of wit. If you are looking for a gift for your little one, I would highly recommend this book!
Great read-a-loud book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-22
Review Date: 2003-12-22
I discovered this treasure after reading Shel's poetry books to the kids. I read it to them on a long flight across the country and had the people in the seats around me listening in discreetly. It has some great morals and gems in it. About knowing who you are inside and finding your way in this world. And about the absurdity of hunting from the lion's point of view. The kids just love the bit about every lion having their own hunter's rug.
Mountain Light: In Search of the Dynamic Landscape
Published in Paperback by Sierra Club Books for Children (1986-10)
List price: $19.95
Used price: $10.00
Average review score: 

Very good Guidelines to "concept" extraordinary pictures
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-02
Review Date: 2008-08-02
Well, even in the tenth revision, it is one of the classics one photographer needs to have in his bookshelf.
It is not "how-to" (albeit it is how-to) but to get the idea of having that image created in your mind and then banned on chip of film.
Galen Rowell writes clear and deep essays about what his heart touches.
It does help if the reader has a broader knowledge about art, painting, and especially "construction techniques" to frame a picture with your camera.
Highly recommended!
It is not "how-to" (albeit it is how-to) but to get the idea of having that image created in your mind and then banned on chip of film.
Galen Rowell writes clear and deep essays about what his heart touches.
It does help if the reader has a broader knowledge about art, painting, and especially "construction techniques" to frame a picture with your camera.
Highly recommended!
The photography book you should READ
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-19
Review Date: 2007-11-19
Galen's images are inspiring, but the real value of this book is the wealth of topics, inspiration, and creative thinking presented in the articles.
This is NOT a coffee-table book. It is one you should take the time to read and digest. If you're an outdoor photographer you will appreciate the energizing effect of Galen's writing. A rare gem among countless other "pretty pictures but not much substance" offerings.
This is NOT a coffee-table book. It is one you should take the time to read and digest. If you're an outdoor photographer you will appreciate the energizing effect of Galen's writing. A rare gem among countless other "pretty pictures but not much substance" offerings.
A Must Read For Landscape Photographers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-23
Review Date: 2007-07-23
This is a must read for anyone who likes to shoot landscape photography. This book doesn't go into a lot of technical details, and the author assumes the readers have a basic knowledge of how SLRs operate, but rather it deals more with the "why" of photography and "when", which I found to be very interesting and thought provoking. Galen Rowell shares his insights about mountain light and how his mind works when he is out with a camera along with what photography meant for him, and it changed my approach to landscape photography. He also shares his unsuccessful stories, which is not very usual for these types of books, and it's good to see that even for photographers of his level things have never come easy. Luck is a big part of it all, and he has a great essay there on how to be in a better position for its appearance. In addition, this book is full of his outstanding landscape art, and that alone is worth whatever the price you will pay for it.
Great Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-10
Review Date: 2007-01-10
It's a great book ! you'll find all you need about photographing up in the mountains ! Galan Rowell was a great person ! A book worth reading by anybody who enjoys photography at high altitude.
A photography how-to book, not a camera manual
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-29
Review Date: 2007-03-29
This is a book about making meaningful landscape photographs. This is not a book about which f/stop to use or how to adjust your depth of field or exposure. There are a ton of those types of books on the market. This book is about vision, learning to see and connecting personally with your images.
If you're comfortable with the mechanical aspects of your camera and are struggling with "technically well executed but lifeless images" this is your guide.
I highly recommend it.
If you're comfortable with the mechanical aspects of your camera and are struggling with "technically well executed but lifeless images" this is your guide.
I highly recommend it.

Mousekin's Golden House
Published in Hardcover by Holiday House (1964-09)
List price: $9.95
Used price: $33.93
Collectible price: $199.95
Collectible price: $199.95
Average review score: 

Timeless Classic. Bring it back! +a craft
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-06
Review Date: 2008-01-06
This story and its illustrations work on so many levels for so many purposes--for parents and their children, teachers and their students, librarians and their readers.
Please, somebody, reprint it. (It is wearing out and being lost from library shelves.)
If you are lucky enough to have access to a copy and are looking for a great project to tie in, here is one I developed for my story times:
Fold an orange piece of cardstock (or construction paper) in half. Cut it out to look like a slightly flattened pumpkin--leaving enough seam along the folded edge at the top of the pumpkin so you can open the pumpkin like a card. On the front of the pumpkin the children can draw the pumpkin's face. Then have available bits of tissue, cotton, yarn scraps, small feathers, etc for the child to glue onto the inside of the pumpkin. Have a simple, sleeping mouse shape cut out of gray foam sheet, felt or construction paper that the children can decorate. (With crayons or markers or add a little pink triangle nose and a short length of cord or ribbon for a tail.) Glue the mouse into the comfy "golden house."
Patty
Please, somebody, reprint it. (It is wearing out and being lost from library shelves.)
If you are lucky enough to have access to a copy and are looking for a great project to tie in, here is one I developed for my story times:
Fold an orange piece of cardstock (or construction paper) in half. Cut it out to look like a slightly flattened pumpkin--leaving enough seam along the folded edge at the top of the pumpkin so you can open the pumpkin like a card. On the front of the pumpkin the children can draw the pumpkin's face. Then have available bits of tissue, cotton, yarn scraps, small feathers, etc for the child to glue onto the inside of the pumpkin. Have a simple, sleeping mouse shape cut out of gray foam sheet, felt or construction paper that the children can decorate. (With crayons or markers or add a little pink triangle nose and a short length of cord or ribbon for a tail.) Glue the mouse into the comfy "golden house."
Patty
Seems Critical Mass is Gathering
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-06
Review Date: 2007-12-06
We need to contact the publisher and rally for this book being reprinted. And whatever you do DO NOT RE-ILLUSTRATE IT! All we will truly remember is how the book looks. Our memories lie with the mouse's little face. Change that and it will fail.
favorite childhood book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-19
Review Date: 2007-10-19
This was one of my favorite childhood books. Take note publishers! We want it back!
Out of print-what a shame!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-17
Review Date: 2007-10-17
Why? Why? Why is this book out of print? When I was in college one of my teachers read this book to us as part of a class on children's literature. I loved this book the first time I heard it and twenty years later I have one very worn copy that someone drew on-I found it in a box at a used book sale. I wish I could have a beautiful new copy to share with the children in my class. Every time I read this book to my students they are fascinated by the pumpkin creating a beautiful golden home for cute little Mousekin! Please somebody-smarten up and bring this book back into print so future generations of children can enjoy this wonderful book!
A true Halloween classic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-30
Review Date: 2007-09-30
It's been more than 25 years since I enjoyed this book, and I wish it was still in print. Easily my favorite Halloween book of all time, and memories of the story still bring a smile to my face. It's a true shame that this book isn't in print, but some libraries do have it on their shelves.
Books-Under-Review-->Kids and Teens-->School Time-->Science-->Living Things-->Animals-->37
Related Subjects: Birds Reptiles and Amphibians Marine Life Mammals Endangered Species Invertebrates
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Related Subjects: Birds Reptiles and Amphibians Marine Life Mammals Endangered Species Invertebrates
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Side Note: I love this book so much that I am using it as part of one of my College reports!