Scholastic “Discover More”: Human
Body. By Steve Setford. Scholastic. $15.99.
Scholastic “Discover More”: Polar
Animals. By Susan Hayes and Tory Gordon-Harris. Scholastic. $12.99.
Scholastic “Discover More”
Stickers: Sharks. By Laaren Brown. Scholastic. $6.99.
The ever-expanding
Scholastic “Discover More” series keeps finding more things about which kids
can discover more – in books whose strong visual orientation is coupled with
careful attention to detail in the small amount of text provided per page. Human Body is intended “for expert
readers,” which means the information is fairly detailed, but the presentation
is as enthusiastically exclamatory here as in all the books in the series:
“Life would be difficult if you had to stop breathing to digest a meal!”
“Medical illustrators knew as much about the human body as doctors and
professors did!” “In fact, you are mostly water!” The relative complexity of
the presentation “for expert readers” is more a matter of detail than anything
else. For example, the analysis of what elements people are made of is a
bright, multicolored two-page spread that not only explains the body’s “big
six” elements (oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, calcium and phosphorus) but
also lists seven other elemental components – and gives percentages for
everything (calcium is 1.5%, for instance, while iron is 0.006%). There is
actually a considerable amount of factual information crammed into the
illustration-heavy pages. On the pages about hair and nails, for example, is a
note that red-haired people have about 80,000 scalp follicles, while ones with
blond or brown hair have around 146,000 – and, in a separate note, split ends
(of any hair color) occur because “on an old or damaged hair, the cuticle peels
off [and] the keratin fibers below unravel.” Tremendously blown-up photos of
eyelash mites and head lice are as dramatic and scary as they are intended to
be, while fact after fact provides insight into bodily systems, explaining why
you can never hear your voice the way others hear it, noting that children
laugh 300 times a day but adults only 17 times a day, saying that the fastest
nerve signals travel 250 miles per hour, telling why we shiver, pointing out
that our skin completely renews itself every 28 days, and much more. As an
introduction to anatomy that has far more information in it than many
traditionally laid-out books for young readers, Human Body is an excellent way for kids to find out a lot about
what makes people tick, with illustrations so well done that even adults can
appreciate and learn from them: the layout explaining and diagramming synovial
joints, for instance, is one fine example among many here.
Polar Animals is a smaller-size book that is designated as being
“for confident readers,” which means it has equally intriguing photos (a
two-page spread of basking walruses is a high point) with simpler writing
providing information that is every bit as engaging as the contents of more-complex
books in the series: “The arctic tern travels 1.25 million miles in a lifetime
(that’s the same as going to the Moon and back three times!).” “The Arctic
woolly bear moth is a caterpillar for seven years before it turns into a moth.”
“No one is sure why a narwhal has a tusk. …Tusks can grow to 9 feet!” “Half of
a whale’s or dolphin’s brain is awake at all times.” There are more photos and
fewer explanatory diagrams here than in Human
Body, but the overall layout of the book is quite similar, giving
precedence to visuals – mostly photographs – and fitting sentences or short
paragraphs of information amid, between and around the visual material. Polar Animals is not primarily about
humans, but it does contain information on ones who live in the polar regions,
with photos of Inuit people herding, hunting, fishing and managing their lives
in a forbiddingly cold area. The concluding interview with a scientist gives additional
insight into how polar animals are studied and by whom. This “Discover More”
entry is interesting in its own right, and can be a gateway to the more-complex
books in the series as children become more-adept readers.
Not much reading at all is
required for Scholastic “Discover More”
Stickers: Sharks, which is just what the title would indicate: a book in
the form of the “Discover More” series, but containing stickers (260 of them) to
peel and adhere to various pages. In truth, the book looks like a “Discover More” entry (a thin one), but its approach
is less informational and more for fun – for example, it includes a variety of bad
jokes: “Why did the shark cross the coral reef? To get to the other tide.” Some
factual information is certainly present, including some that is fascinating:
“When a great white is sick, it thrusts its stomach out of its mouth, then
pulls it back in.” “You’re more likely to be killed by a hair dryer than a
shark.” But the emphasis here is as much on entertainment as on information,
with, for example, pages called “Hand-build a hammerhead” and “Produce a
predator” – to both of which readers are supposed to add stickers to produce
“something REALLY terrifying!” The stickers themselves range from parts of
shark bodies (for the create-a-shark pages) to ones showing specific types of
sharks and ones used to populate ancient oceans or a modern reef. This thin
book may be fun for kids who already have some knowledge of sharks and just
want to remember a few selected facts while they enjoy placing stickers here
and there. But it falls short of other “Discover More” books by compromising
its factual elements with too much irrelevance and too much material that is
simply silly. Unlike the other “Discover More” books, it therefore gets a (+++)
rating.
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