Bobo and the New Baby. By Rebecca Minhsuan Huang. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $16.99.
Horses. By Seymour
Simon. Harper. $17.99.
Water. By Seymour
Simon. Harper. $17.99.
101 Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Reptiles. By April Jones Prince. Illustrated by Bob Kolar.
Cartwheel Books/Scholastic. $8.99.
There are plenty of books for kids about sibling rivalry when a new baby
arrives, but not nearly so many about “dogling rivalry,” which is essentially
what Rebecca Minhsuan Huang charmingly explores in Bobo and the New Baby. Bobo is an absolutely adorable dachshund
with a doggone good life that basically includes snoozing, digging, eating,
chasing and, um, snoozing again. His humans, Mr. and Mrs. Lee, spoil him and take
him everywhere, and that is just fine with Bobo. But somehow Mr. and Mrs. Lee
have neglected to warn Bobo in advance that they are about to bring home a new
member of the family. Well, Bobo is only a dog, right? But dogs have feelings,
too, and when the two humans return with a third,
miniature human, suddenly Bobo is very, very excited and happy – his enthusiasm
beautifully communicated in one of Huang’s most-delightful illustrations.
Unfortunately, Bobo’s happiness gets him scolded: “‘You will scare the baby,’
says Mr. Lee,” and poor Bobo, who never meant any harm, is left downcast and
dejected and just plain miserable. He walks away into a room whose darkness
reflects his unhappy mood, leaving behind the three people in a room that is
full of light. And now, whenever Bobo wants attention – even to go for a walk –
Mr. and Mrs. Lee tell him “no,” because the baby is eating, sleeping, needs
changing, or something else. Poor Bobo! And then, to make matters worse, Bobo
sees a bee that has gotten into the house, and knows he has to protect the
baby. So he chases the bee everywhere, making quite a mess, and just as he
leaps to catch it, Mr. Lee comes in and tells him to stop because he will “hurt
the baby.” Mr. Lee’s shadow completely covers the poor, sad little dog, whose
downcast eyes tell the whole story – up to this point. But then Mrs. Lee spots
the bee and realizes that Bobo was only trying to help, and Mr. Lee
understands, too, and apologizes, and so Bobo is formally introduced to the
baby, and the four members of the
family are last seen happily relaxing together. For a story aimed at young
children, Bobo and the New Baby is a
surprisingly realistic look at how dogs may feel when a baby is brought home.
It was created by Huang as a counterbalance to a true story of a couple who got
rid of their dog once they brought home a baby – a terrible thing to do to a
loving, loyal family member who just happens to belong to a different species.
Huang’s book, in addition to being a sweet story in and of itself, can be a
valuable teaching tool for kids and adults alike, hopefully making it possible
for more stories like Bobo’s to have endings as happy as this one.
Children
looking more for facts and beautiful photography than for a warmhearted
fictional story (even one with a real-life tie-in) will enjoy the new, updated
edition of Seymour Simon’s Horses, a
book originally dating to 2006. Simon has written hundreds of books – more than
300, a remarkable number – and manages again and again to provide a
well-thought-out, clearly presented set of facts that he mixes with attractive
photographs to help young readers learn about the natural world. Horses, like
dogs, are longtime human companions, and Horses
starts by pointing out the animals’ usefulness ever since they were tamed some
5,000 years ago. Pictures of fossils show how prehistoric horses gradually
evolved into the animals we know today, and then Simon moves to more-recent
times to explain how horses came to America and how wild herds grew from horses
that escaped captivity. The photos of horses, with and without people, tell all
by themselves a great deal of the story here: one horse is seen attached to a
cart that it is supposed to pull (and Simon notes that pulling strength is
still called “horsepower”); two are shown nuzzling each other; two are shown
competitively rearing up on their hind legs to assert dominance; and so on.
Again and again, Simon inserts small and fascinating facts that neatly
complement the photos: horses can see in almost a complete circle; they can see
yellow and green, but not all colors; they can sense when people are angry or
scared, possibly by detecting changes in humans’ smell; a foal can walk less
than one hour after birth; and so on. His discussion of the way a horse moves
is especially interesting, since the way horses’ legs move together varies
depending on the animal’s gait. The strength of horses is also amazing to
learn: some teams of two can pull 50 tons, as much as the weight of 10
elephants. There is also an explanation of the difference between horses and
ponies. Simon’s books are formulaic in layout and fairly standardized in
narrative, but because they are books of facts for young readers, that is all
to the good: a book like Horses is
involving, educational, easy to read and understand, and very helpful in giving
information about an animal that has been enormously important to human
civilization for thousands of years.
Even more important to humans – and to horses and all other living
things – is water, the subject of a brand-new Simon book whose layout and
writing style are every bit as accessible as those in Horses. Here too, Simon includes plenty of interesting facts about
something that we usually take for granted: “Water is the only substance on
Earth that is found naturally in all three states of matter: as a liquid
(water), as a solid (ice), and as a gas (water vapor).” “Water…dissolves more
substances than any other liquid. Even rocks are dissolved by water, though it
may take many years.” “Almost two-thirds of an adult’s weight is water and
nearly 80 percent of a newborn baby’s weight is water.” Coupling this
recitation of well-selected facts with fascinating photos – such as one of an
insect standing on water, illustrating the principle of surface tension – Simon
in Water explains the water cycle,
the way ocean levels change during periods of worldwide cooling and warming,
the way water in rivers can carve valleys and shape the ground, the areas where
ice and snow exist year-round (about 10% of Earth’s surface), the existence of
frozen deserts in the Arctic and Antarctic, and more. Simon has a well-honed
talent for covering a lot of material in a small amount of space – and making
the facts interesting by including relevant photos, such as one of a scuba
diver near a school of beautiful tropical fish opposite a page explaining just
how heavy water is and just how much pressure there is in the oceans, whose
average depth is two-and-a-half miles. Informative and intriguing, fact-packed
but presented in a simple-to-understand way with easily followed style, Water is a first-rate introduction to
what is, so far as we humans know, the
basis of life: “When we look to find life on distant planets or moons, the
first thing we look for is water.”
Indeed, although we cannot be 100% sure about the possibilities of life
elsewhere in the universe, we do know that water is crucial to life on Earth –
all kinds of life, from the smallest to the largest, from life as we know it
today to life as it was long, long before humans existed. And way back before
the first horse, and even before the first horse’s ancestor, Hyracotherium, which lived 55 million
years ago, the world was dominated not by mammals such as horses (much less
humans) but by reptiles, most famously by dinosaurs. A book that is at once
simple and surprisingly comprehensive in discussing and showing what is known
about many extinct reptiles is April Jones Prince’s 101 Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Reptiles. This oversized,
unusually shaped board book, with pages cut to resemble the spinal scales of
the Stegosaurus on the cover, relies heavily on Bob Kolar’s clear and simple
illustrations to show young readers how different the many types of ancient
reptiles were. And they were very different indeed: Kolar’s pictures use the
latest scientific findings to indicate, for example, the distinction in head
shape between superficially similar long-necked dinosaurs such as Brachiosaurus
and Barosaurus, or between flying reptiles (which were not dinosaurs) such as
Dimorphodon and Pterodaustro. Those long, complicated-looking names are given
pronunciation guides throughout the book: Prince breaks each into syllables and
shows just which of those syllables carries an accent. The repeated refrain of
the book goes, “Every dino has a name./ No two dinos were the same!” Sometimes
this is varied – for non-dinosaurs – to, “Every reptile has a name./ No two
reptiles were the same!” This encourages kids to look closely at Kolar’s
pictures to find out just how the various sort-of-similar-looking creatures
really did differ in important respects. The book also serves to familiarize
interested young readers with dinos that are far less frequently mentioned than
“superstars” such as Tyrannosaurus rex: the same group of powerful meat-eaters
includes Herrerasaurus, Troƶdon, Tarbosaurus, and others, all of them shown as
clearly as current scientific knowledge allows. This is a short book, but it is
packed amazingly full of information – and the end, which spreads pictures of
dinosaurs and other extinct reptiles out over two pages and invites kids to
examine and count all of them, is a fine summation of the entire book and an
intriguing invitation to examine each of the creatures more closely while
counting all of them.
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