What
a Map Can Do. By Gabrielle Balkan.
Art by Alberto Lot. Rise x Penguin Workshop. $18.99.
Maps are everywhere in life today – and nowhere. With the rise of
cellphones and GPS-enabled car tracking systems, people are using maps more
than ever in their daily lives, whether to explore an unfamiliar area or to pin
down the closest neighborhood pizza shop. But today’s maps are mostly just part
of the electronic background, simply apps into which users enter requests for the
information they want and from which they get instructions on how to find the
place to which they want to get. Map locations are “factoids,” similar to what
users find when looking up details on a favorite movie or TV show or sports
event. And as in looking up those other tidbits of information, users do not
really think about how a map gets
them what they want to know and takes them where they want to be. Some sort of
primer on understanding maps would be a big help.
What a Map Can Do is that
primer. Gabrielle Balkan attentively and attractively delves into the basics of
how maps work, with Alberto Lot’s amusing cartoon illustrations making
map-following an enjoyable journey no matter where the maps may take young
readers. These are old-style non-electronic maps, the sort people still
encounter in specialized situations here and there.
A smiling young raccoon is readers’ guide to what maps are, how they
work, and what they do, explaining how a map can give information on anything
from a very small space to a very large one. The raccoon first presents a map
of his room that “shows where the important things are, from above,” and asks
readers to take part in using it by pointing to his stuffed animal – which, the
map indicates, is on his bed. Then he shows a map covering a larger area: his
whole house. On this map, each room is labeled, and kids are asked to find the
gray toilet in the bathroom, the scooter in the hallway, and other things in
the raccoon’s home.
Widening the perspective still further, the raccoon next offers a map of
his neighborhood, explaining where on the map his house is located and how
readers can plot the path from the house to the playground, figuring out how
many other houses they will pass on the way. And so it goes, page after page:
there are maps of so many things – the city, a bus route, a museum and more. Balkan
and Lot do a fine job of showing the different ways in which maps are used in
different circumstances: to find a bus stop, for example, and to locate
specific exhibits within the museum, and – on a larger scale – to figure out
how to “travel from one city to the next, one state to the next, and even one
country to the next!”
What a Map Can Do is also helpful in some unexpected ways. At one point, the raccoon narrator offers “a map of the inside of my body” as he explains that a map “can show us things we cannot see,” such as the path that the animal crackers on which he is snacking “will take to get from my mouth to my stomach.” The map key in this particular case shows where to find bones, brain, heart, stomach and the swallowed snack. Elsewhere, on a visit to a National Forest, the raccoon explains that “a map can show us what to expect,” such as easier and more-difficult trails to follow, longer and shorter ones, and so on. And he points out that maps are not just used for physical locations that someone may want to explore: a weather map “shows us if it will rain or snow or hail or shine in our area,” and a star map “can help us understand the sky.” It is significant that there is not an electronic map in the entire book: the basic maps are the old-fashioned paper kind that fold up and then open out to reveal whatever they are designed to show. Given the reality that electronic maps likely dominate most kids’ and families' experiences today, it is refreshing to have a book that goes back to basics and shows the purposes for which maps are made and the ways that maps created on paper can be used. In fact, paper maps can do one thing that electronic ones never can: readers who remove the book jacket will find that the book’s actual cover shows a paper map folded into airplane shape and flying across the page. Just try that with an app!
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