Browse all books

Books with author Mary Batten

  • Rattler

    Mary Batten

    Paperback (Grosset & Dunlap, Oct. 11, 2016)
    Slither along with one of nature's deadliest hunters—and learn all about what makes rattlesnakes so dangerous!Rattler has not eaten in a week. After hiding from the hot sun all day, he starts hunting. Rattler uses his venom to paralyze his prey and his tail to scare away predators. He even swallows his prey whole! Follow along as Rattler grows up, sheds his skin, and has his own children.
    K
  • Spit: What's Cool About Drool

    Mary Batten

    Paperback (Firefly Books, Sept. 20, 2019)
    The title says it all. It's yucky. It's gooey It makes your food chewy Ptooey! Ptooey! Oh, spit. Ew! Nasty! Ew! Gross! But spit is no spitball joke. Drool is cool! It's one of the most amazing fluids in your body. In Spit, renowned science writer and children's author Mary Batten examines everything that's cool about drool. Spit keeps your mouth moist. It begins digesting food the minute you take a bite. It keeps your teeth from wearing away. It keeps your tongue from choking you to death! But it isn't just humans that rely on spit, anything with a mouth needs saliva to keep functioning. A vampire bat has special saliva that stops its victim's blood from clotting. A spitting spider can trap prey in gooey saliva that it can spit in 1/700th of a second -- that's fast! And, if spitballs are your thing, perhaps try your hand at spitting antelope dung; the record, set in South Africa, is 51 feet! In Spit, Batten's informative and informal text is paired with humorous illustrations and real-life photos to help tell the important story hiding in this gross-out subject. From the DNA in human mouths to the science behind Pavlov's dogs to the astounding wonders of saliva in the animal kingdom, Spit uncovers the secrets secreting in the many mouths on the globe.
    V
  • Spit: What's Cool About Drool

    Mary Batten

    Hardcover (Firefly Books, Sept. 20, 2019)
    The title says it all. It's yucky. It's gooey It makes your food chewy Ptooey! Ptooey! Oh, spit. Ew! Nasty! Ew! Gross! But spit is no spitball joke. Drool is cool! It's one of the most amazing fluids in your body. In Spit, renowned science writer and children's author Mary Batten examines everything that's cool about drool. Spit keeps your mouth moist. It begins digesting food the minute you take a bite. It keeps your teeth from wearing away. It keeps your tongue from choking you to death! But it isn't just humans that rely on spit, anything with a mouth needs saliva to keep functioning. A vampire bat has special saliva that stops its victim's blood from clotting. A spitting spider can trap prey in gooey saliva that it can spit in 1/700th of a second -- that's fast! And, if spitballs are your thing, perhaps try your hand at spitting antelope dung; the record, set in South Africa, is 51 feet! In Spit, Batten's informative and informal text is paired with humorous illustrations and real-life photos to help tell the important story hiding in this gross-out subject. From the DNA in human mouths to the science behind Pavlov's dogs to the astounding wonders of saliva in the animal kingdom, Spit uncovers the secrets secreting in the many mouths on the globe.
    P
  • The Winking Blinking Sea:All About

    Mary Batten

    Library Binding (Millbrook Press, April 1, 2000)
    Fullcolor photographs enhance this lively book about illuminating and "flashing" fish, known as bioluminescent fish, found in the oceans around the world.
    K
  • Extinct! Creatures of the Past

    Mary Batten

    Paperback (Golden Books, Sept. 1, 2000)
    Describes giant bugs, birds, and mammals that lived long ago and became extinct during the last Ice Age, discusses the extinction of more recent animals, and examines efforts to protect endangered species.
    L
  • Rattler

    Mary Batten

    eBook (Grosset & Dunlap, Oct. 11, 2016)
    Slither along with one of nature's deadliest hunters—and learn all about what makes rattlesnakes so dangerous!Rattler has not eaten in a week. After hiding from the hot sun all day, he starts hunting. Rattler uses his venom to paralyze his prey and his tail to scare away predators. He even swallows his prey whole! Follow along as Rattler grows up, sheds his skin, and has his own children.
  • Winking, Blinking Sea

    Mary Batten

    Paperback (Millbrook Press, April 1, 2001)
    Explains bioluminescence in ocean life, giving examples of sea creatures that glow, such as ostracods, Bermuda fire worms, and flashlight fish.
    K
  • Extinct! Creatures of the Past

    Mary Batten

    Hardcover (Golden Books, Sept. 1, 2000)
    Describes giant bugs, birds, and mammals that lived long ago and became extinct during the last Ice Age, discusses the extinction of more recent animals, and examines efforts to protect endangered species.
    L
  • Discovery by Chance: Science and the Unexpected.

    Mary. Batten

    Hardcover (Funk & Wagnalls Co, June 15, 1968)
    STATED FIRST EDITION (cbard listing) About unexpected scientific discoveries and breakthroughs.
  • Baby Wolf

    Mary Batten

    Paperback (Grosset & Dunlap, July 20, 1998)
    An illustrated, second-level reader teaches little children about the maturation of a baby wolf born underground in a warm den, as she learns how to howl, how to hunt, and how to live with her wolf pack.
    K
  • The tropical forest: Ants, ants, animals & plants

    Mary Batten

    Hardcover (Faber, March 15, 1976)
    Describes the interrelation of plant and animal life in a tropical forest.
  • Winking, Blinking Sea

    Mary Batten

    School & Library Binding (San Val, April 16, 2001)
    None