What Do You Do With a Tail Like This?
By Steve Jenkins and Robin Page
32 pages, ages 4 – 9
(and older!)
Houghton Mifflin Company, 2003
Seems like this is the week to share tales about tails. On
Wednesday I chatted with Carrie Pearson about how some animals use tails to
keep warm in the winter. And that reminded me of this cool book by Steve
Jenkins and Robin Page. I love it for the wonderful paper collage illustrations…
and that it is so quirky.
What do you do starts out with noses, not tails! Then ears –
did you know that crickets hear with ears that are on their knees? Finally, a
page about tails! There’s curly tails and swatty tails and stingy tails and
stinky tails – peeuw! And the question is: what do you do with a tail like
this?
If you’re a monkey, you hang from a tree. If you’re a
lizard, you break off your tail and run away. After looking at feet and other
adapted body parts, Jenkins and Page end with four pages of detailed notes on
noses, ears, tails, eyes, feet and mouths. That’s where you learn that the
nitty-gritty details about how skunks use their tails, why lizards don’t mind
losing their tails, and why giraffes have that funny hank of hair on the end of
their tails.
One more thing I really like about the book is the aesthetic
appeal: it’s a square (10 inches by 10 inches) and the tail on the cover is a
spiral. Review copy of this book found at my local library.
Check out more animal tails over at STEM Friday.
And join Nonfiction Monday over at "Wendie's Wanderings" for some cool nonfiction books!
Check out more animal tails over at STEM Friday.
And join Nonfiction Monday over at "Wendie's Wanderings" for some cool nonfiction books!
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