Gr 4–6—Battling arthropods are introduced with a focus on attributes that would help or hinder in a fight. The animals are rated (on a scale of one to five) on their size, speed, and other attributes. Captioned close-up photographs depict featured body parts fairly effectively. "Fierce Fact" insets provide extra bits of material, usually related to prey and defense. Each book culminates with a present-tense action narrative of the imagined battle. Lively battle descriptions end with a clear winner, who then feasts upon the loser. The fights between scorpion and centipede and tarantula/tarantula hawk are most engaging, since those two pairs are likely combatants in the wild. The others are still intriguing, although referring to the giant hornet as male ("the hornet sends his stinger") is an unfortunate inaccuracy, as only female hornets have stingers.
VERDICT Lively action with useful but not always accurate information.
Comparing and "rating" two insect species by their physical features, each book in this science-based series imagines the opponents fighting "to the death." The gimmicky text emphasizes such words as threat, attack, and defense, and includes "Fierce Fact" sidebars; magnified photos of insect "weaponry" (pincers, stingers, fangs, and venom) are featured throughout. The "battle" then occurs in cinematic present tense. Reading list, websites. Glos., ind. Review covers the following Edge Books: Bug Wars titles: Scorpion vs. Centipede and Praying Mantis vs. Giant Hornet.
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