Pacing can be tricky in nonfiction picture books. Authors are trying to wrestle all the messiness of real life into a single, coherent narrative. In The Elephant’s New Shoe, Laurel Neme gets the pacing just right.

Cover of book shows a young elephant with a prosthetic leg.

This true story tells how an animal rescue organization helped a disabled elephant, Chhouk, get a prosthetic leg. We first see how a rescuer found Chhouk. His attempts to build up enough trust so that Chhouk would let him help kept me anxiously turning the pages. The subsequent search for an elephant leg prosthetic and the struggle to shape it just right upped the suspense even more.

The whole story is full of heart. I found myself pulling not only for Chhouk but also for the rescuer and his entire team.

The back matter is full of interesting material about elephants in general and about Chhouk in particular. I loved seeing photos of him in his new wildlife refuge home.

This book will appeal to animal lovers and make anyone feel more optimistic about humanity.

More about the Wildlife Alliance, the group that rescued Chhouk, here.

Another great book about animal prosthetics.

The Elephant’s New Shoe by Laurel Neme, illustrated by Ariel Landry. Orchard Books: 2020.

Advanced reader’s copy provided for my honest review.

Image shows a tree growing from a book and reads Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge 2020

I’ve been working through my stash of 2018 nonfiction books and discovered I had a set of animal books. So many great titles!

Cover of book shows a cartoon bug next to three small cartoon bugs.

Bugs Don’t Hug: Six-Legged Parents and Their Kids by Heather Montgomery, illustrated by Stephen Stone (Charlesbridge: 2018). This book about parenting practices of insects has fantastic page turns! On one page we see what human parents do, and on the following page, we see an analogous action that bus take. The illustrations are funny and cartoonish, and there are fascinating short text blocks explaining insect behavior.

Cover of book shows a honeybee flying above a meadow.

The Honeybee by Kirsten Hall, illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault (Atheneum: 2018). The rhyming text is fun to read aloud, but the standout of this book is the stunning illustration.

Cover of book shows gorilla, octopus, rhinoceros, and other beasts.

Lovely Beasts: The Surprising Truth by Kate Gardner, illustrated by Heidi Smith (Balzer + Bray: 2018). I love the idea behind this book–taking a common belief about an animal and then turning it on its head. We see a gorilla next to the word “Fierce” but then turn the page to see a gorilla as a tender parent.

Cover of photo shows photo of baby hippo swimming

Saving Fiona: The Story of the World’s Most Famous Hippo by Thane Maynard  (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt: 2018) looks like a picture book but is really more of a middle grade read. Its dense text, written, by the director of the Cincinnati Zoo, and wonderful photographs tell the inspiring story of the birth of a baby hippo and how it survived a dicey beginning when it came prematurely.