Plants can't sit still
(2022)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Lerner Publishing Group, 2022
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781728466767 MWT15185165, 1728466768 15185165
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Audisee® eBooks with Audio combine professional narration and sentence highlighting for an engaging read aloud experience! Do plants really move? Absolutely! You might be surprised by all ways plants can move. Plants might not pick up their roots and walk away, but they definitely don't sit still! Discover the many ways plants (and their seeds) move. Whether it's a sunflower, a Venus flytrap, or an exotic plant like an exploding cucumber, this fascinating picture book shows just how excitingly active plants really are. "With a doctorate in biology, Hirsch understands her subject, but equally important is her ability to communicate with well-chosen words that make the ideas fun and memorable for children. . . . A new way to see the plants around us."-starred, Booklist "Colorful, exuberant illustrations work impressively with the text. . . . Excellent collaboration produced a winner: graceful, informative, and entertaining."-starred, Kirkus Reviews "In comparison to animals, plants seem rooted in one place, but that doesn't mean they're not in motion. Underground, their roots slither along, searching for water and sometimes sending up new shoots. Seedlings push through the soil, unfurl their leaves, and grow toward the sun. Some leaves shrink when they sense vibrations, while others snap shut to catch a fly. Seeds can be long-distance travelers, from small, light ones that whirl and glide through the air to a large one that floats across oceans. With a doctorate in biology, Hirsch understands her subject, but equally important is her ability to communicate with well-chosen words that make the ideas fun and memorable for children. While some may be content with the main text alone, others will be fascinated by appended descriptions of a squirting cucumber shooting its seeds or the raspberry seed riding through a bear's digestive system. Posada's impressive artwork, created with cut-paper collage and watercolors, illustrates the ideas clearly while creating varied, often lovely effects with colors and textures. Back matter fully supports the picture-book text with additional information on each of the plants featured, but not named, in the main section. A new way to see the plants around us."-starred, Booklist "'Plants don't have feet or fins or wings, yet they can move in many ways. / Look closely and you'll discover that plants can't sit still.' These words dance across two pages loaded with images of several kinds of plants in different stages of their lives: seeds, vines, flowers, fruits. Colorful, exuberant illustrations work impressively with the text to prove that plants-in every stage-move in order to find and acquire uniform needs: 'water, sunshine, and room to grow.' Throughout, readers are treated to a plethora of words more often used for fauna than flora, such as 'wiggle' and 'squirm.' Nighttime images show bean leaves 'nodding' and tulip flowers 'folding,' while moon flowers 'wake with the stars.' One sentence is momentarily startling to adults with fixed definitions: 'A seed is a plant built for travel.' However, the pages that follow easily support that statement, as different kinds of seeds depart from parent plants, travel, and grow into seedlings. The resources at the end of the book are as well-planned and carefully executed as the rest, offering information-including names and descriptions of every plant in the book-that expands the interest level of the text from preschool into early elementary. Excellent collaboration produced a winner: graceful, informative, and entertaining."-starred, Kirkus Reviews "Focusing on an aspect of plant life that not many consider, this title examines the ways in which plants move: sunflowers turning toward the sun, a snapping Venus flytrap, and seeds hitching a ride downriver. Hirsch uses simple verbs (e.g., wiggle, reach, unfold) to explore a characteristic or trait of plants (specifically their need to seek out 'water, sunshine, an

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