In my library stack this week were two picture books about birds of prey. Both books were written by the women who helped rescue them, and use the story of their experiences in helping create a life in captivity for their charges to show something about the basic biology of the animals.

Cover of book shows mother hawk with two baby chickensHawk Mother tells the true story of an injured red-tailed hawk who tried to hatch her infertile eggs every year. Finally the author tries swapping out her infertile eggs for fertile chicken eggs. The hawk successfully hatches and raises two chicks. The book concludes, “If she had found them in the wild she would have eaten them. That’s what hawks do. But since she hatched them herself she gave the all the care and protection they needed until they were fully grown.”

Cover shows a bald eage with a 3-D printed prosthetic beakThe Bird and the Beak tells the true story of a bald eagle who lost the top half of his beak to gunfire. When the author, a wildlife conservationist, has a chance encounter with a scientist, they come up with a plan to 3-D print a prosthetic beak for the bird. They enlist the help of their own dentists and dental hygienists (dentists as heroes!) and create a new beak for the bird. I loved how the text of this book stresses from the beginning, even before the injury occurs, all the ways an eagle in the wild uses its beak. By the time the bird is injured, it’s obvious how very serious his situation is without a beak. I also loved the back matter. There are a full nine spreads devoted to information about the biology of eagles, the cultural significance of eagles, conservation issues related to eagles, and an essay about prosthetics. This is a book where the main text will draw in any reader and the back matter will let passionate kids pursue their interest.

Both of these books are lavishly illustrated with color photographs, and both are, without comment, about female scientists. And both have covers that impel you to open the book.

Happy reading!

Hawk Mother: The Story of a Red-tailed Hawk who Hatched Chickens by Kara Hagedorn. (Web of Life Children’s Books: 2017).

Beauty and the Beak: How Science, Technology, and a 3D-Printed Beak Rescued a Bald Eagle by Deborah Lee Rose and Jane Veltkamp. (Persnickety Press: 2017).

Picture of children surrounding a globe

Alyson Beecher hosts the Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge at kidlitfrenzy.com. Visit there for more great nonfiction picture books!

A coyote in the moonlight.Wild predators thrill kids. Have you ever checked out the library shelves about lions, tigers, and alligators? Usually there are scant pickings. But how often do we think about the predators that live among us? Coyote Moon is a beautiful exploration of urban wildlife.

The book is organized around spare sentences using vivid language to describe what Coyote does. Almost every spread starts with two words describing Coyote’s actions, “Coyote trots…Coyote sniffs…Coyote looks.” This would be a great book to use in a discussion of verbs or as a mentor text for kids struggling to use vivid language.

If you love the picture book as an art form, this is also a great book to examine. It uses page turns brilliantly to build suspense and then satisfy it.

Bagram Ibatoulline’s art is beautiful. Since coyotes are nocturnal, most of the book’s art is done in a Rembrandt-esque dark palette. I was especially impressed with the shifts in perspective from page to page. Sometimes we’re underground, sometimes we’re looking at Coyote from above, sometimes we’re looking at Coyote as if we were the prey he was attacking.

I was lucky enough to win my copy in a KidLit Frenzy giveaway (thanks so much!) but this is definitely a title I would consider purchasing. In fact, it may be going on my list of titles to give as gifts this Christmas.

Coyote Moon, by Maria Gianferrari and Bagram Ibatoulline. Roaring Brook Press: 2016.

Children around a globe.

 

 

I participate each week in the Nonfiction Picture Book Challenge at KidLit Frenzy.