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Overview
Using the kid-appeal of the weird to entertain and educate, John Muir Publications has created this popular series that highlights creatures in eye-catching full-page color photos. facin gpages share informative facts about their history, habitat, and eccentric habits. Each book includes an engaging introduction, taxonomy chart, and glossary. These books generate awareness of, and inspire respect for, the amazing range of life on our planet.Describes twenty-one interesting birds including the flightless single-wattled cassowary; the brown pelican, whose beak holds more than its belly; the monogamous blue-crowned pigeon; and the graceful swimmer, the hoatzin.
Editorials
School Library Journal
Gr 3-6-- Initially this visually appealing book seems lively enough to attract browsers, but upon closer inspection they will realize that it offers little more than one-paragraph chapters on birds, many of which are not at all weird (e.g., hummingbirds, penguins, pheasants). There is no table of contents, but there is a glossarized index. Disappointment awaits readers who move from the index into the insubstantial text. For each of the several dozen birds discussed there is a full-color, full-page photograph accompanied by a chatty fact or two. This is not the stuff reports are made of, and it has little to offer most children. --J. J. Votapka, Hempstead Public Library, NYBook Details
Published
August 19, 1996
Publisher
Muir (John) Publications,U.S.
Pages
32
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781562612795