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Plenty of information is packed into each book, with visuals that are effective, if not especially eye-catching.
This informative series centers on abilities common to various animals. After a two-page introduction, each book breaks down the title ability into subtopics explored in two-page case studies, such as chemical communication of skunks and metamorphosis of frogs. Engaging captioned photographs and sidebars are included on clean layouts. The books end without conclusions, but the material is compelling. Reading list. Glos., ind. Review covers the following Fact Finders: Animal Scientists titles: Amazing Animal Communicators, Amazing Animal Shape-Shifters, and Amazing Animal Tool-Users and Tool-Makers.
High-quality individual titles stand alone, and the whole set provides a strong introduction to prehistoric life.
The evolution of animal life on Earth, from formation to the rise of mammals, is profiled across the four books. Hosted by a smiley tetrapod, each packed two-page spread features facts and descriptions of several species and their remains, their environments, and major geological and evolutionary events. Computer-generated images of the various creatures include many with anthropomorphized features. Ind. Review covers these Prehistoric Field Guides titles: The Dawn of Planet Earth, Dinosaurs Rule, The Last Days of the Dinosaurs, and The Rise of Mammals.
Smooth prose and strongly organized text and illustrations make this a better-than-average choice for the dinosaur shelves.
The series describes common and less-familiar dinosaurs through a focus on prominent fossil finds, explaining how the evidence can be used to determine the behaviors, feeding habits, competitors, and environments of each species; paleontologists are also profiled. Tiny photos, illustrations of varying quality, and odd layouts detract somewhat from the presentations. There are seven other fall 2015 books in this series. Reading list. Glos., ind. Review covers these Exploring Dinosaurs titles: Apatosoaurus, Compsognathus, Maiasaura, Oviraptor, and Velociraptor.
The consistent, if unexciting, structure makes this series a good fit for beginning readers hoping to digest introductory data, but they will need to look elsewhere for more engaging treatments of these highly interesting animals.
Gr 5 Up—A highly attractive design featuring crisp photos, colored text boxes and sidebars, and clearly labeled chapters and subsections sets this series apart...