Explore My World: Honey Bees
Material type:
- 9781426327131
- YL/638.1/ESB
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Kandy | YL/638.1/ESB |
Available
Order online |
YB140163 |
Total holds: 0
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
In this charming picture book, curious little kids will learn all about the bustling world of honeybees and the important role they play in our delicate ecosystem. These engaging Explore My World picture books on subjects kids care about combine simple stories with unforgettable photography. They invite little kids to take their first big steps toward understanding the world around them and are just the thing for parents and kids to curl up with and read aloud.
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Horn Book Review
Excellent close-up photographs elevate an exclamation-heavy and fanciful text describing a bee's honey-gathering journey, the hive members' everyday tasks, and the bee life cycle. Additional facts are scattered throughout. Appended pages cover honey production and the importance of pollination; a "Bee Maze" and an activity prompting kids to "waggle dance like a honey bee" are also included. (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Kirkus Book Review
A colorful introduction to the honeybee. Paired with stunning photographs, many in extreme close-up, straightforward text informs readers about honeybees and their hives. The text, aimed at newly independent readers, works hard to be accessible: a worker bee "sips the runny nectar through her straw-like tongue and stores it in a special, just-for-honey tummy." A small, circular callout adds that the "tongue is called a proboscis (pro-bohs-kis)." The connection between that nectar and the honey the bees are arguably best known for is elided, however, in favor of a brief overview of the role of the queen, larval development, and a teaser about the fact that "hives can be found in unusual places," including "human-made hives." Six pages of additional text at a somewhat more advanced level discuss the different roles worker bees play, honey (finally), and pollination (wrongly implying that honeybees pollinate tomatoes). A simple maze and a mystifying diagram of the waggle dance conclude the book; both activities are negligible. But the reason to buy this book is the photographs, crisp, astonishingly detailed, and many at such close range that individual grains of pollen can be easily discerned; they, more than the text, will have readers rapt. Serviceable text is lifted by thrilling photography. (Informational early reader. 4-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.
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