Joan Procter (1897-1931) was fascinated by reptiles and engaged with them as an herpetologist, researcher, and zoo-exhibit designer-but also on a personal level, forging connections with animals not generally perceived as being friendly to humans. In Valdez's affirming picture-book biography, readers are immersed in Procter's world, from her childhood bedroom (where she developed her obsession with lizards and her talents in observing and documenting their characteristics) to the museums and zoos of early-twentieth-century London (where the arrival of the first Komodo dragons from Indonesia caused a public and scholarly sensation). Valdez refers subtly throughout the book to the chronic illness that led to Procter's death at age thirty-four but mainly emphasizes all that Procter accomplished in her short life: important contributions to reptile taxonomy, the modern design ?of the Reptile House at the London Zoo, and fearless interactions with ?Sumbawa the Komodo dragon. Sala's illustrations portray a stylish woman of the 1920s, with a long rope of pearls around her neck-and a variety of small lizards on her shoulders and wrists-communing with the creatures she loved. The final pages include photographs of Procter as a young girl and adult woman as well as more details about her remarkable life and about Komodo dragons. Appended with a substantial bibliography. danielle j. ford
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