MY AMERICAN SCIENTIST
LOG IN! REGISTER!
SEARCH
 
RSS
Logo

NANOVIEW

Beetle Bonanza

Anna Lena Phillips

 

From%20Beetle%20Bop.Click to Enlarge ImageDenise Fleming's latest picture book is a vivid adventure in the world of the largest insect order. Beetle Bop (Harcourt, $16, ages 3 to 7) portrays its subjects so vibrantly that they nearly zip off the page as they buzz, creep and dive through their habitats, from forest floor to sidewalk crack to placid pond. They and other animals (a red salamander, a skunk, a predatory frog) are accompanied by wonderful rhyming, action-filled text. Fleming successfully avoids the pitfalls of much writing for young children: Her words are rhythmic but not singsongy, exuberant but not cute. It's a pleasure to read these lines aloud.

Although Fleming takes some liberties with her depictions of beetles, readers will recognize several—the lightning bugs, for instance, whose glowing posteriors look a lot like the nearby lightbulb against which less easily identifiable beetles crash. Other highlights include bark beetles on a tree trunk and a gray click beetle engaged in a fantastic flip. I was even glad to see striped cucumber beetles—cursed pests that eat the plants in my garden—pictured, fittingly enough, on a nodding sunflower.

Recognizing that all these flitting, diving and fluttering insects are beetles will help children grasp the idea that animals sharing key characteristics are classified together, even though they may not look at all alike. I wish the book included a list of names of the insects on which the illustrations are based. Still, there's some help here for curious readers. A fact page notes, in simple language, what makes a beetle a beetle. The gorgeous illustrations and equally fine text of Beetle Bop leave no doubt about one thing: Beetles rock!—Anna Lena Phillips

 

Feynman:
An Excerpt from a New Comic Biography

Read an excerpt from the new graphic-novel-style biography of Richard Feynman in an American Scientist slide show


Pizza Lunch Podcasts

About once a month at Sigma Xi headquarters, we liven up the lunch hour with an American Scientist Pizza Lunch talk. In these informal lectures, scientists describe new research to nonscientists. The series is light on jargon but heavy on solid science. Each Pizza Lunch offers an in-depth look at its subject, whether it's bedbugs or the smart grid. Click below to read about and download these talks -- and to subscribe!



Indexes

Year-end indexes in PDF format:

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010


EMAIL TO A FRIEND :

Subscribe to American Scientist

Sites of Interest

Duxbury Ventures Websites

München Fair Hotels

ABC Fundraising

Promotional Products

Business Cards

Checking Account

Home Loan

Check out weight loss hq for good advice.

Made-in-China.com

Elaine Hochberg