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Books in Nature All Around series

  • Nature All Around: Plants

    Pamela Hickman, Carolyn Gavin

    Hardcover (Kids Can Press, April 7, 2020)
    Balancing child-friendly facts with colorful illustrations, this perfect introduction to plants is sure to inspire the budding naturalist in every child. From crowded cities to open prairies, deserts to wetlands, plants grow everywhere! This comprehensive introduction will open children's eyes to the plants that surround them every day and how important they are to life on our planet. It covers the basics of plants, such as their parts, life cycles and growing zones. Then it takes readers on a season-by-season tour of what a plant-watcher can expect to discover throughout the year. There are sections on strange plants and those that are endangered, and how readers can help. And for hands-on experience, there's an interactive Q&A for learning how to identify plants, and an activity for growing your own plants. With the perfect balance of child-friendly facts and colorful illustrations, this book encourages children to actively engage with the natural world. Bestselling and award-winning author Pamela Hickman covers all the essential science about plants --- including photosynthesis and pollination --- in clear and easy-to-digest text. And Carolyn Gavin's colorful illustrations bring it all to life, with accurate and inviting representations of the information. This book has strong curriculum applications for life science and earth science lessons in grades two through five, particularly for the characteristics of living things. Rounding out its usefulness are a full-spread growing zone map, an index and a glossary.
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  • Nature All Around: Birds

    Pamela Hickman, Carolyn Gavin

    Hardcover (Kids Can Press, Sept. 1, 2020)
    The perfect resource for budding bird-watchers, this beautiful, comprehensive introduction encourages children to appreciate the wonderful world of birds all around them.Because birds can be spotted in every neighborhood, and in all seasons, they are an excellent choice for piquing children's interest in wildlife. Here's a comprehensive, child-friendly guide to birds that makes the perfect starting point. Colorful pages explore the characteristics of different bird species, along with many of their fascinating and unique features, from their feathers to their eggs and nests. A journey through a year in the lives of birds gives readers clues to what to look for, season by season. And a beginning bird-watcher section helps youngsters get started in the field, including a list of what tools they need to use, and guiding questions to help with bird identification (for example, by their song, size and unusual color patterns).This book is part of the Nature All Around series, which encourages children to hone their observation skills in order to appreciate the variety of wildlife that can be found right outside their front doors. Bestselling, award-winning author Pamela Hickman brings birds up close, with loads of fun facts about bird life cycles, homes, habitats and most common behaviors. The vivid illustrations by Carolyn Gavin offer clear depictions of the subjects and is a pleasure to peruse. This book has many curriculum applications in grades two to five, when children are learning about the characteristics of living things, and covers both life science and earth science topics. End matter includes information on how readers can help endangered birds, a bird feeder activity, a glossary and an index.
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  • Nature All Around: Trees

    Pamela Hickman, Carolyn Gavin

    Hardcover (Kids Can Press, April 2, 2019)
    This comprehensive and beautifully illustrated introduction to trees and the important role they play is part of the essential Nature All Around series. The book first explores the parts of trees, their life cycles, the difference between deciduous and evergreen trees, leaf types and the processes of photosynthesis and respiration. Then it takes readers through a year in the life cycle of trees, describing what happens during each of the four seasons. Readers will discover the many ways trees are vital to the environment and how various animals can share one tree as a home.A two-page spread contains a map of forest regions across the United States and Canada. And there's even a section for ?budding? tree-watchers, with fun questions to help identify trees in their neighborhoods.Combine bestselling author Pamela Hickman's child-friendly, informative text with Carolyn Gavin's whimsical, painterly illustrations and you get both a complete reference tool and a book that children will be drawn to for its enticing visual appeal. This book has strong curriculum applications in grades two through five, when children are learning about the characteristics of living things. It works specifically for life science lessons on the growth and changes in plants, and on the interdependence of living things. End matter includes information about endangered trees and how readers can help, as well as an activity, glossary, and index.
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  • Nature All Around: Bugs

    Pamela Hickman, Carolyn Gavin

    Hardcover (Kids Can Press, Sept. 3, 2019)
    Did you know there are twice as many insects in the world as all other animals combined? They're all around us ... if we know where to look! This beautifully illustrated book about bugs introduces young readers to ants, honeybees, dragonflies and more! It covers the basic body parts of different kinds of bugs, their life cycles, their range of unique habitats and even teaches how to tell them apart from common ?insect impostors? like spiders. And it takes readers on a year through the lives of bugs, explaining which bugs can be found in each of the four seasons, and where. An interactive beginner's bug-watching guide provides a series of questions to lead readers through the steps of identifying bugs, and lists the tools every bug-watcher needs. This book is the perfect inspiration for new and long-time bug-watchers to get up close with these fascinating tiny creatures! Pamela Hickman's comprehensive introduction to bugs is sure to encourage the naturalist in every child. The information is strikingly displayed through Carolyn Gavin's whimsical, painterly illustrations. As a part of the Nature All Around series, this book has strong STEAM curriculum applications for grades two to five, covering life science --- particularly the characteristics of living things --- and earth science topics. End matter in this excellent resource includes information about endangered bugs and how readers can help, step-by-step instructions for making an insect feeder, a glossary and an index.
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  • Where Am I?: The Story of Maps and Navigation

    A G Smith

    Paperback (Fitzhenry & Whiteside, June 1, 2001)
    Where Am I? is the fascinating story of how people began to chart the physical world and their place in it. Richly illustrated with meticulous drawings, it takes readers on a journey of their own. From Babylonia to Scandinavia, North America to China, Greece to Polynesia, ingenious methods and inventions will delight all those who marvel at man's spirit of adventure and his ties to home.
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  • If We Could See the Air

    David T Suzuki, Eugenie Fernandes, Kim Fernandes

    Paperback (Stoddart Kids, Aug. 1, 1996)
    One day at the beach, Megan and Jamey learn that, although the air is invisible, it is all around us, and it does amazing things. Without air, animals and plants could not live. In the second book of the "Nature All Around" series, readers can learn, through the story and drawings, all about the importance of the air.
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  • The Shaman's Nephew: A Life in the Far North

    Simon Tookoome, Sheldon Oberman

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Dec. 1, 2000)
    When Jewish author/storyteller Sheldon Oberman met Inuit artist/hunter Simon Tookoome, he knew the encounter was special. Still, he had no idea their meeting would result in an amazing collaboration that would span a decade. Through the use of many tape recordings and translations, Sheldon has painstakingly woven the threads of a remarkable man's life into a book for all to treasure. With Tookoome's drawings to enhance the text, Oberman has managed to express the cadence and voice of one of the last of the Inuit to live the traditional nomadic life in the Arctic. The Shaman's Nephew magically transports readers to a cold climate that warms and grows more familiar with every turn of the page. Shortlisted, Governor General's Award 2000 Norma Fleck Award 2000 Parent's Choice Silver Honor Winner 2000 The Parent's Council, Select Title 2002 Red Cedar Award, Non-Fiction Nominee
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  • Moonbeam on a Cat's Ear

    Marie-Louise Gay

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Feb. 1, 1992)
    One night, Roise and Toby Toby discover a way to steal the moon right out of the sky, accomplished by a rather plump white cat and a mouse in pajamas. Moonlight, stars, and flying fish set the stage for their enchanting, mysterious adventures. Did Roise and Toby Toby really sail through the clouds and stars? Or is it only a dream? Ask a small child, you may be surprised...
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  • The Shaman's Nephew: A Life in the Far North

    Simon Tookoome, Sheldon Obrman

    Hardcover (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Oct. 1, 1999)
    When Jewish author/storyteller Sheldon Oberman met Inuit artist/hunter Simon Tookoome, he knew the encounter was special. Still, he had no idea their meeting would result in an amazing collaboration that would span a decade. Through the use of many tape recordings and translations, Sheldon has painstakingly woven the threads of a remarkable man_s life into a book for all to treasure. With Tookoome_s drawings to enhance the text, Oberman has managed to express the cadence and voice of one of the last of the Inuit to live the traditional nomadic life in the Arctic. The Shaman_s Nephew magically transports readers to a cold climate that warms and grows more familiar with every turn of the page.
  • Midnight Mimi

    Marie-Louise Gay

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, March 1, 2001)
    Children who hate going to sleep will love Midnight Mimi, who would rather be an owl or a bat or even a wicked witch's cat than sleep away the night. Marie-Louise Gay's enchanting illustrations and rhyming verse turn Mimi's room into a moonlit magical place where she carries on a secret and thrilling night life.
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  • Angel and the Polar Bear

    Marie-Louise Gay

    Paperback (Fitzhenry and Whiteside, April 1, 1993)
    Shortlisted for the Governor General's Award for Children's Illustration Angel woke up one morning. There was water all over her apartment! "Well," said Angel, "what should I do now? I can't swim." Then Angel got a good idea, and the fun began. . .
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  • The Backyard Time Detectives

    David T Suzuki, Eugenie Fernandes, Kim Fernandes

    Paperback (Stoddart Kids, Aug. 1, 1996)
    The this book in this series shows easy-to-understand concepts and bright illustration. Young readers can time travel back to the ice age, witness a volcano erupting, visit pioneer times, and help shape the future. Full color.
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