Ape
Material type:
- 9781406319293
- YL/599.88/JEN
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | YL/599.88/JEN |
Available
Order online |
YB024501 |
Total holds: 0
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Orang-utan, chimp, bonobo, gorilla - the great apes are some of the biggest and most extraordinary animals on our planet. Meet all four in this book, and find out how the fifth great ape - the human - impacts on the lives of these increasingly rare species.
GBP 6.99
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
The premise is simple: introduce readers to four of the five members of the great ape family (the fifth member is actually the reader). But in the hands of White, a former zookeeper making her picture book debut, this becomes much more than a garden-variety survey. Working in oil and pencil, White portrays orangutans, chimps, bonobos and gorillas as imposing and playful, brooding and wistful-in other words, as having psychologically complex, fully realized personalities. The pictures are consistently stunning: using bold brushstrokes and theatrical lighting, White compels readers to savor the subtle nuances of browns and black that compose each animal's fur. Jenkins's (The Emperor's Egg) economical, conservation-oriented text ably sets each scene ("Bonobo chatters and hoots and calls to her friends, while feasting on figs high off the ground") while occasional captions add information about the apes' habitat or behavior. But this book isn't really about reportage; in fact, the portraits are set against white sweeps with only minimal propping to suggest the environment. What seems to matter for White is making an intense emotional connection between subject and reader. And she succeeds-the great apes have found their John Singer Sargent. Ages 3-7. (Dec.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedSchool Library Journal Review
K-Gr 3-Jenkins avoids anthropomorphizing in this simple introduction to four rare apes-chimps, bonobos, orangutans, and gorillas-and provides basic facts about their daily eating and sleeping habits. The highly textured and naturalistic pencil and oil illustrations deftly blend subtle color and back-and-white scenes and are made for group sharing. However, the book suffers from the use of too many fonts of varying sizes without logical reason, from a bold 1 inch to a very small cursive. The book concludes by comparing humans to the four others and explains the negative impact that we've had on their survival. A final map that shows where the great apes live and how many survive provides needed context for young readers. A 10-item index makes this book marginally useful for reports; students will need to use the Web addresses of three conservation organizations as a starting place to learn more.-Ellen Fader, Multnomah County Library, Portland, OR (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Horn Book Review
(Preschool, Primary) Simple text and large pencil-and-oil pictures are set on expansive white pages to introduce the five species of great apes: orangutan, chimp, bonobo, gorilla, and...guess who? Each of the first four gets its own sequence of four or five double-page spreads that provide basic information in large type about diet, behavior, and social structure ("Bonobo chatters and hoots and calls to her friends, while feasting on figs high off the ground"). Suggesting a shared adult/child audience, footnotes in a smaller cursive type offer a bit more detail ("Bonobos live in the rain forest of the Congo basin in central Africa"), and the last, unillustrated, spread makes the connection between the apes and people ("We humans are part of the great ape family, too"). The close-up portraits of the apes, intimate but not sentimentalized, will draw young lookers in, and they won't be let down by the concise, respectful text. A single back page provides a helpful map, an index, and three conservation websites. From HORN BOOK, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.There are no comments on this title.
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