Beavers

by Gail Gibbons (Author)

Beavers
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade
Beavers are fascinating animals. They build their own homes and live in family groups. They keep busy with their sharp teeth, powerful tails, and big webbed feet. Their work helps to preserve wetlands. Gibbons explores where they live, what they eat, how they raise their young, and much more. Full color.
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Publishers Weekly

Gibbons adds beavers to the list of the animals covered in her long-running series. The spreads combine illustrations, text, panels, insets, and captions to an almost graphic novel-like effect at times, as the beavers build both a dam and a lodge ("Next the beavers arrange branches and stones above the lodge floor. It is the beginning of a dome-shaped structure." Other sections describe what beavers eat, how they communicate ("They warn other beavers or enemies by whistling, hissing, or growling"), and beaver family life. In informative, succinct, and busy spreads, Gibbons highlights the animals' extraordinary instincts for structural engineering. Ages 4-8. (Sept.)

Copyright 2013 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 3--Gibbons has a talent for bridging the divide between picture books and more detailed nonfiction. She provides information on two levels. An ongoing narrative at the bottom of each page includes general facts about beavers and is organized in sections with headings such as "Building a Beaver Dam." Then, on each full-page drawing, she labels important features of beavers, their habitat, and other animals that share the ponds and riverbanks. Most of the detailed information on each page is written in complete sentences as well, with vocabulary words in capital letters for easy identification. This allows the author to include a wealth of information within the picture-book format. The full-bleed pen-and-ink and watercolor illustrations are engaging but incredibly busy. A map is included along with a page of additional beaver facts at the end of the book. This inviting addition will definitely find a home in many collections.--Susan E. Murray, formerly at Glendale Public Library, AZ

Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Gail Gibbons
Gail Gibbons has written more than 140 books and has been called a "master of picture book nonfiction" by Booklist. The Washington Post has said "Gail Gibbons has taught more preschoolers and early readers about the world than any other children's writer-illustrator." In recognition of her "distinguished contribution to children's literature," Gail was awarded the Regina Medal Award. She is also the recipient of the Children's Book Guild of Washington, DC Nonfiction Book Award. Gail's informational books cover a vast range of topics and have received innumerable awards and honors that range from American Library Association Notable Children's Books to National Science Teachers Association - Children's Book Council Outstanding Science Trade Books for Children to International Reading Association - Children's Book Council (IRA-CBC) Children's Choice Books, beloved by young readers across the country. She divides her time between Vermont and Matinicus Island, Maine.
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9780823431847
Lexile Measure
870
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Holiday House
Publication date
August 31, 2014
Series
-
BISAC categories
JNF051150 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Science & Nature | Zoology
JNF003140 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Animals | Mammals
Library of Congress categories
Beavers

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