Just Like Us! Birds. By Bridget Heos.
Illustrated by David Clark. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
Just Like Us! Plants. By Bridget Heos.
Illustrated by David Clark. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
Just Like Us! Fish. By Bridget Heos.
Illustrated by David Clark. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
Just Like Us! Cats. By Bridget Heos.
Illustrated by David Clark. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $7.99.
The predictable unpredictability of the
continuing Just Like Us! series by
Bridget Heos and David Clark is one of its major pleasures. These short factual
paperbacks all begin the same way, by choosing an animal (or, in one book,
plants) and stating all the ways the chosen subject is obviously not like us at
all. But maybe it is like
us…hmm…let’s find out. That is always Heos’ setup – and the mixture of Clark’s
cartoon illustrations with photographic material is the same time after time as
well. And all the books are enjoyable as well as informative, thanks to the
simple reality that they engage young readers in finding ways in which so many
living things, however different they may be, also have so much in common.
Sometimes Heos and Clark use anecdotes to
make their points. There is a famous one in the book on birds, about Mozart
adopting a pet bird that he heard whistling a theme from one of his piano
concertos – a work not yet revealed to the public. This is a small and
appealing mystery in Mozart’s life – probably he hummed the tune on an earlier
visit to the shop and the bird overheard it and imitated it, but no one really
knows – and it neatly makes the point that birds and humans (even humans who
are not genius composers) have some musical things in common. This book also
includes information on how bird parents (some of them, anyway) care for their
young in ways similar to those used by human parents, and how parent birds have
to clean up the avian equivalent of dirty diapers when their babies are small.
Clark’s illustration here, which includes a real bird removing a fecal sac from
a birdhouse but is dominated by a tired-looking cartoon bird carrying a basket
of just-washed diaper-like items to be dried on a clothesline, is a
particularly good example of the blending of reality and fantasy that makes all
these books both fun and useful.
The book on plants stands out because it
is about, well, plants – not animals. Even here, though, Heos and Clark find
ways to relate plant life to human life. One page is headlined, “Be Sure to
Drink Eight Thousand Glasses of Water a Day,” and explains, “An NBA player
produces more sweat than a kid shooting hoops, and the bigger the tree, the
more it ‘sweats’ too.” This is a bit of a stretch, but a clever way to explain
that tall trees can lose hundreds of gallons of water per day and must
constantly replenish their supply from underground. The overall narrative here
helps young readers think of things in ways that they probably haven’t: “With
the right mix of sunlight, water, and nutrition, plants grow up and have babies
– just like people. A plant baby is a seed!” That is both accurate and
interesting, as are a great many items here. For instance, one page focuses on
the durian, a fruit whose “smell has been compared to that of pig poop, rotten
onions, and dead people,” but nevertheless attracts animals that eat its flesh
and eventually deposit its seeds so new plants can grow. In addition to showing
a photo of a chimpanzee enjoying a durian, this page features Clark’s drawing
of a super-happy cartoon pig joyfully hugging the fruit as flies swarm
everywhere and a bird on a nearby branch wears a clothespin on its beak. The
pages on how plants, like humans, defend themselves, and how they, also like
humans, sometimes wage war on other plants, are also fine mixtures of
real-world and cartoon illustrations, all in the service of sort-of-like-us
facts.
Fish do not appear to be much more like
people than plants are, but Heos and Clark make this case effectively, too. Of
course they talk about fish schools, explaining that these large groups protect
small fish in two ways: by providing many eyes to watch for predators and by
making it hard for most predators to focus on a single fish to attack and
consume. They also explain that both people and fish need oxygen – we just have
different ways of obtaining it. There is an interesting explanation of the
biology of the mudskipper, which “spends up to 90 percent of its time on shore”
rather than in the water and can do this even though it “doesn’t have a tiny
fish scuba mask” – the sort of thing people would need to spend a lot of time
in water – but instead “fills pouches in its cheeks with water” so its gills
can absorb oxygen from the stored liquid. There is information here on fish
that, like humans involved in warfare, use armor, such as the porcupine fish’s
spines, which are not only sharp but also contain poison. And Heos observes,
“People dress to impress, and so do fish,” explaining that 25% of ocean species
visit coral reefs at some point and often sport “bright colors and bold patterns”
to stand out and attract mates. There are also examples of fish that, like
human parents, care for their babies – many do not, but seahorses and cichlids
do, although not in human-like ways (seahorse fathers have a front pouch to
contain babies, while cichlids hold their young in their mouths). The point is
not to make fish seem much like
people, but to show some ways in
which they resemble humans, despite the obvious differences.
The book on cats may seem to have easier
points to make, since many people do share their homes with cats and some sort
of resemblance therefore seems logical. But cats are not pack animals like
dogs, and even house cats retain a great deal of the wild, efficient-hunter
predation instincts that lions, tigers and other big cats possess. In fact, as
Heos points out, cats are “the world’s most effective carnivores,” and a lot of
feline life in the wild is brutal, with cats “ruthlessly conquering other
lands” just as humans sometimes do – with invading males overthrowing others
and killing their cubs so as to mate with the former ruler’s females. The
behavior of wild, big cats certainly has a lot in common with that of house
cats, including plenty of sleep (up to 20 hours a day) and lots of
playtime-by-wrestling by cubs (babies of big cats) as well as kittens (babies
of small cats). There is information here not only on ways cats are similar to
humans but also on ways they are quite different – for example, because they
“lack the gene that allows other mammals to taste sweetness,” which means they
have little interest in any human food that has even a slight hint of sugar. On
the other hand, just as humans enjoy swimming, so do some cats – such as
jaguars, which actually hunt underwater and are good distance swimmers.
The point of all these pleasant,
easy-to-read nonfiction books is that humans are similar in a number of ways to
pretty much all the denizens of the planet that we all share – one earlier
volume in the series even dealt with ants. Although Heos and Clark certainly
stretch the narrative and illustrations a great deal of the time in order to
make the parallels with humans seem more significant than they really are, the
concept here is worthwhile: to tell and show young readers just how much we do
have in common with the natural world around us, and in so doing, hopefully, to
give them more respect for other residents of Earth and a greater inclination
to treat the environment with care and concern.