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   Book Info

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Sharks  
Author: Gail Gibbons
ISBN: 0823410684
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From School Library Journal
PreSchool-Grade 3-- A companion volume to Whales (Holiday, 1991), Sharks is less ebullient in feeling, probably because the subject is more alarmingly awesome. Gibbons again uses clear blues and greens and soft grays, but her palette is modified here with browns, startling touches of pink, orange, and yellow, and a sharp reduction of the frothy white of the earlier book. A few illustrations show sharks in somewhat contorted positions, giving odd angles to caudal appendages. The information is specific and generally accurate, although sources consulted referred to months rather than the ``few weeks'' Gibbons gives sharks' ``thorny cased eggs'' to develop and hatch. The data is often quite complex, and may be beyond a portion of the audience to which this format will have the most appeal. More informative than Cole's Hungry, Hungry Sharks (Random, 1986) or Selsam's A First Look at Sharks (Walker, 1979), this book is on par with Waters's Sea Full of Sharks (Scholastic, 1990). It's sure to be in constant circulation. --Patricia Manning, Eastchester Public Library, NYCopyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Card catalog description
Describes the physical characteristics of sharks and different kinds of sharks.




Sharks

ANNOTATION

Describes the physical characteristics of sharks and different kinds of sharks.

FROM THE CRITICS

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 3-- A companion volume to Whales (Holiday, 1991), Sharks is less ebullient in feeling, probably because the subject is more alarmingly awesome. Gibbons again uses clear blues and greens and soft grays, but her palette is modified here with browns, startling touches of pink, orange, and yellow, and a sharp reduction of the frothy white of the earlier book. A few illustrations show sharks in somewhat contorted positions, giving odd angles to caudal appendages. The information is specific and generally accurate, although sources consulted referred to months rather than the ``few weeks'' Gibbons gives sharks' ``thorny cased eggs'' to develop and hatch. The data is often quite complex, and may be beyond a portion of the audience to which this format will have the most appeal. More informative than Cole's Hungry, Hungry Sharks (Random, 1986) or Selsam's A First Look at Sharks (Walker, 1979), this book is on par with Waters's Sea Full of Sharks (Scholastic, 1990). It's sure to be in constant circulation. --Patricia Manning, Eastchester Public Library, NY

     



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