The Animal Book: A Collection of
the Fastest, Fiercest, Toughest, Cleverest, Shyest—and Most Surprising—Animals
on Earth. By Steve Jenkins. Houghton Mifflin. $21.99.
What’s in the Rain Forest? A Nature Discovery Book. By Zoe Burke.
Illustrations by Charley Harper. Pomegranate Kids. $14.95.
Anyone who doubts the
continued importance of reference books in our electronic age would do well to
take a look at The Animal Book. With
simple but not overly simple text and excellent drawings that are both
realistic and designed to highlight specific animal features, Steve Jenkins presents
children and adults alike with a top-notch introduction to the animal kingdom
past and present, and along the way manages to explain the evolution of life on
Earth and to answer a whole series of intriguing questions. Everyone knows that the dinosaurs were the
biggest animals ever, for example – right? Nope: the single biggest animal ever
to live exists today – it is the blue whale. Dinosaurs were the biggest land
animals ever, though. Well, everyone knows that the biggest land mammal ever is the elephant – right?
Again, nope: the extinct indricotherium, four times the weight of an African
elephant, holds that distinction.
All this information is
available online, of course, but not the way Jenkins presents it. His
juxtapositions, his use of scale to show animal sizes, his careful emphasis of
certain characteristics that would not be as clear in photographs or when found
at typical Web sites, combine to create a book that is not only fact-packed but
also fascinating. For example, he draws the eye of the colossal squid actual
size – it takes up most of two pages – and shows the smallest known spider in its actual size (about as big as the
period at the end of a sentence in the book) as well as much enlarged to make
its appearance clear. The silhouette of an adult human is used to show how big
a great white shark is – and how much bigger the extinct megalodon was. Elsewhere,
the human silhouette helps readers comprehend the size of a manta ray, which is
bigger than a grizzly bear, and an oarfish, which is larger than a
hippopotamus.
In one section, “The Story
of Life,” Jenkins points out that every animal on Earth is related to every other
one, since all trace their lineage back to a microscopic single-celled organism
that lived billions of years ago. He then goes on to provide “a brief history
of life,” and here his skill at illustration makes a major contribution as he
shows animals that looked like plants, nautiloids (ancient ancestors of today’s
squids and octopi), “strange segmented animals, unlike any alive today,” and
many more. The Animal Book is filled
with well-known animals – and also with strange ones of which readers have probably
never heard, such as the tiny water bear, “the champion of extreme habitats,”
which can “thrive at temperatures hundreds of degrees below zero and swim in
scalding hot springs” and even survive “for days in the vacuum of space.” And
then there are animal defenses: how many readers will know, before Jenkins
tells them, that the slow loris is the world’s only poisonous primate and that
the boxer crab defends itself by picking up poisonous anemones from the sea
floor “and waving them like boxing gloves in the face of an attacker”?
Along the way in this
fascinating book, Jenkins takes time to discuss animal groups, animal extremes,
the techniques of predators, and some amazing animal senses: the platypus has
electricity-sensitive receptors on its bill, for example, and the naked mole
rat uses the Earth’s magnetic field to find its way through its tunnels. There
are surprises everywhere here, even in a pie chart showing the number of living
animal species: of the 1,367,765 listed in 2011 by the World Conservation
Union, 1,000,000 were insects and another 102,250 were the insect-like spiders
and scorpions. The Animal Book is a
reference work that families will enjoy having around for years, no matter how
sophisticated Web searches become, because the book offers the thrill of
unexpected discovery in a way that focused Web searches never can. And Jenkins’
well-wrought illustrations provide exceptional clarity throughout – as when,
for example, he surveys and portrays the creatures that are deadliest to humans
and points out that “the world’s most dangerous animal, by far, is the
mosquito.” The Animal Book makes you
think – and helps you discover.
The aims are more modest and
the discoveries not so all-encompassing in What’s
in the Rain Forest? But that does not make this little book any less
attractive – in fact, it is considerably easier to digest than Jenkins’ large
and thick one. Charley Harper (1922-2007) was a well-known, highly skilled
nature artist who combined accurate observation, a wonderful sense of color and
shape, and skillful stylization into illustrations that make animals seem even
more real than they are in reality. This book makes a fine companion to
Pomegranate Kids’ previous Zoe Burke/Harper “Nature Discovery Book,” What’s in the Woods? It also stands
quite well on its own. Burke’s simple text portrays each animal in amusing
rhymes that nicely complement Harper’s elegantly stylized drawings: “Straight
ahead, the Quetzal bird,/ His splendid feathers bright./ The avocado in his
beak/ Is this bird’s favorite bite.” There are birds aplenty portrayed here,
but they are scarcely the only rain-forest creatures that get Harper’s very
personal treatment. One of the most intriguing illustrations is that of a very
slow mammal: “A two-toed Sloth peers out at us—/ So furry and quite brown—/ Her
favorite way to spend the day/ Is hanging upside down.” The sloth is a pure
study in geometry, with two circles for nostrils, two slightly larger ones for
eyes, a pentagonal head, and 11 absolutely straight darker vertical lines on
what is visible of its tan body. Some of Harper’s pictures, such as the one of
a katydid’s head, are definitely worth a double-take: the katydid looks like a child’s
wheelbarrow with red wheels until you turn the page counter-clockwise and
realize that the wheels are its eyes, peering from its green head, which is
connected by a contrasting stripe (another of those perfect straight lines) to its
white body. What’s in the Rain Forest?
ends in the same clever way as What’s in
the Woods? There is an invitation to find the animals once again, and a
foldout shows all of them at once – followed by a key on the final pages. Harper’s
art is entirely different in kind and impact from Jenkins’. Families that have
both to look at will find themselves appreciating animals in a variety of
different ways.
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