December 3 – Read a New Book Month

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About the Holiday

Yesterday for Read a New Book Month, I shared the amazing encyclopedic An Animal a Day, which introduces children to the vast diversity of animals that populate our always-astonishing Earth. Today I’m highlighting another book in this series that takes readers back millions of years to meet dinosaurs both small and mammoth. These books—one or both—make perfect gifts that will keep on giving throughout the year for kids to dip into by themselves or to share with adults.  

A Dinosaur a Day: 365 Incredible Dinosaurs to Take You through the Year

Written by Miranda Smith

Illustrated by Jenny Wren, Juan Calle, Xuan Le, Max Rambaldi, and Olga Baumert

 

What kid wouldn’t like to share their birthday date with a dinosaur? Or learn about the “tyrannosaur tyrants” whose descendants included the fearsome favorite Tyrannosaurus Rex? Or be able to impress their friends and teachers by rattling off the names and details of such dinos as the Huehuecanauhtlus, the Aepyornithomimus, or the Eustreptospondylus? All of these are easily—and enjoyably—accomplished with this day-by-day walk through prehistoric times.

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Image copyright Jenny Wren, Juan Calle, Xuan Le, Max Rambaldi, and Olga Baumert. Text copyright Miranda Smith. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

Before kids dive into the year, they can learn a bit about early life on Earth, events leading to the rise of the dinosaurs, and the three time periods that ushered in (and out) the wide variety of dinosaurs and other reptiles the earth has hosted. Readers also get a quick primer on fossils and discover other creatures, including lizards, insects, and mammals who coexisted with the dinosaurs.

Getting to the meat of the book, readers find short, info-packed paragraphs about each dinosaur along with the particulars of its period, family, diet, length, weight, and where fossils have been found. Children can also see what these dinosaurs looked like with the lifelike drawings accompanying each entry.

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Image copyright Jenny Wren, Juan Calle, Xuan Le, Max Rambaldi, and Olga Baumert. Text copyright Miranda Smith. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

Fittingly, on January 1 when the year is new, dino-dreamers are introduced to “one of the earliest and smallest dinosaurs”—the Eoraptor, a carnivorous beast that weighed only 22 pounds and measured three feet tail to snout. A special two-page spread spanning January 10th through the 15th describes six more of the smallest, including the feathered and gliding Microraptor at just two pounds and two feet long, the Saltopus, which hopped to nab insects from the air, and the Wannanosaurus that defended itself with its “hard, flat-topped skull.”

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Image copyright Jenny Wren, Juan Calle, Xuan Le, Max Rambaldi, and Olga Baumert. Text copyright Miranda Smith. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

Jumping from the beginning of the year to December 31, readers meet the Ruyangosaurus, which “moved through the floodplains and forests of what is today’s China” in herds, “their long necks swaying as they reached for and snipped off the leaves and branches of the trees and shrubs at all levels.” In between kids encounter all of their well-known favorites as well as some truly unusual multi-horned and -spiked specimens; mammoth long-necked herbivores; underwater beauties; those with features that seem to mirror future animals, such as the Concavenator, which has humps along its back similar to a camel; and almost comical-looking dinos like the Nomingia, whose feathered body and peacock-like fan at the end of its tail looked almost Dr. Seussian. 

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Image copyright Jenny Wren, Juan Calle, Xuan Le, Max Rambaldi, and Olga Baumert. Text copyright Miranda Smith. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

Following the year’s end, Miranda Smith discusses what brought about the end of the reign of the dinosaurs, the survivors of this disastrous event, and the relatives of those once-dominating creatures: today’s birds. Each month also includes two two-page spreads that group together some dinosaurs according to a shared trait—duck-billed dinosaurs, sea reptiles, dinosaur weaponry, and Tyrannosaur tyrants—for example. A pronunciation guide to dinosaur names, a glossary, and an index wrap up this comprehensive encyclopedic look at the world of dinosaurs.

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Image copyright Jenny Wren, Juan Calle, Xuan Le, Max Rambaldi, and Olga Baumert. Text copyright Miranda Smith. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

Miranda Smith presents each of these 365 dinosaurs with scientific facts and fascinating tidbits about the behavior, appearance, environment, defenses, and eating habits, among other things that will satisfy kids’ curiosity and perhaps send them digging to learn more. Her text is clear, comprehensible, and a pleasure to read for a wide age range, from the youngest dinosaur aficionados to the adults who share this book with them.

Show-stopping illustrations from Jenny Wren, Juan Calle, Xuan Le, Max Rambaldi, and Olga Baumert will wow readers with their careful attention to details and dynamic poses. Horns, feathers, spikes, teeth, claws and other features are clearly delineated. You can almost hear these dinosaurs roar at rivals, thrash through underlying vegetation while on the hunt, or call to their herd mates. Full-page illustrations place dinosaurs in their natural environments, where they drink from clean water, butt heads over territorial disputes, raise their young, or ply the depths of oceans in search of food.

Any dinosaur buff would be thrilled to add to their knowledge of these endlessly fascinating creatures with A Dinosaur a Day. The book is sure to be a favorite go-to read on home bookshelves and for public and school libraries.

Ages 6 – 9 and up

Bright Matter Books, 2024 | ISBN 978-0593903339

Read a New Book Month Activity

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Hatch Your Own Dinosaur Eggs

Think there are no more dinosaur eggs to be found? Think again! You can make your own with this easy craft that will have you hatching some T.-rex-size fun! All you need are a few simple ingredients – and don’t forget to wear an apron or old clothes!

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Supplies

  • Old clothes or apron
  • Large box of baking soda (makes between 6 and 8 eggs)
  • Food coloring
  • Water
  • Plastic dinosaur toys
  • Bowl
  • Fork
  • Spoon
  • Wax paper
  • Baking sheet
  • Foil
  • Vinegar
  • Spray bottle (optional)
  • Plastic or metal spoon, stick, popsicle stick, or other implement to chisel with
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Spray the egg with vinegar to hatch your dinosaur

Directions

  1. Wear old clothes or an apron
  2. Cover work surface with wax paper, parchment paper, newspaper, or other protection. Food coloring can stain some surfaces
  3. Pour baking soda into the bowl
  4. Add drops of food coloring in whatever color you’d like your eggs to be. The eggs will darken when baked.
  5. Mix in the food coloring with the fork. You may want to use your hands, too
  6. When the baking soda is the color you want it, begin adding water a little at a time
  7. Add water until the baking soda holds together when you squeeze it in your hand
  8. When the baking soda is the right consistency, spoon some out into your hand or onto wax paper
  9. Push one plastic dinosaur into the middle
  10. Cover the dinosaur with more of the baking soda mixture
  11. Carefully form it into an egg shape
  12. Repeat with other dinosaurs
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Chisel the egg open to hatch your dinosaur

To Bake the Eggs

  1. Set the oven or toaster oven to 200 to 225 degrees
  2. Set the eggs on a baking sheet lined with foil
  3. Bake the eggs for 15 minutes, check
  4. Turn the eggs over and bake for 10 to 15 more minutes
  5. Remove from oven and let cool

To Hatch the Eggs

  1. Eggs can be hatched by chiseling them with a spoon, stick, or other implement
  2. Eggs can also be hatched by spraying or sprinkling them with vinegar

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You can purchase A Dinosaur a Day at these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop (to support your local independent bookstore)

Picture Book Review

December 2 – It’s Read a New Book Month

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About the Holiday

The month of December is a gift-giver’s delight, and there’s no better gift for everyone on your list than a book (or two or . . .). With so many new books hitting bookstore shelves and the long winter days stretching in front of us, this is the perfect time to add to your home bookshelves. Today’s featured book is a gift that keeps giving every day of the year. How? Read on and see! 

Thank you to Bright Matter Books, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books and Barbara Fisch of Blue Slip Media for sharing An Animal a Day with me for review consideration. All opinions on the book are my own.

An Animal a Day: 365 Amazing Animals to Take You through the Year

Written by Miranda Smith

Illustrated by Kaja Kajfež, Santiago Calle, Mateo Markov and Max Rambaldi

The animal kingdom truly is diverse! From the land to the sea to the sky and even the most forbidding places on Earth, there live incredible creatures perfectly suited to their environments. Children are particularly fascinated by the range, size, behaviors, and survival skills of the world’s denizens. But how to get to know them all? A fantastic place to start is with An Animal a Day, which introduces readers to 365 mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and invertebrates in bite-sized paragraphs, accompanied by scientific facts.

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Image copyright Kaja Kajfež, Santiago Calle, Mateo Markov and Max Rambaldi, 2023. Text copyright Miranda Smith, 2023. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

But before you dive in, there are two paragraphs of note: One explains how “new species of animals are being discovered all the time” and gives as an example the May, 2023 announcement that “more than 5,000 new species had been found living on the seabed of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, an unexplored area of the Pacific Ocean.” Another defines the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List conservation rating, which is also included in each animals’ description.

And now the year begins! January 1 introduces the Polar Bear, in which a mother bear leads her cubs over the ice to the water where she will teach them “how to swim, hunt seals and survive in the cold” while raising them over three years to be self-sufficient. As the month progresses, children meet the Goliath Frog (a frog as big as a cat), a Hoopoe bird (the males engage in song duels to deter rivals), and the Indian Flying Fox (which, besides having an imposing 5-foot wingspan, looks like a combination of a bat and a fox), among 27 other critters.

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Image copyright Kaja Kajfež, Santiago Calle, Mateo Markov and Max Rambaldi, 2023. Text copyright Miranda Smith, 2023. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

Each month also contains two, two-page spreads that present animals that, while very different, are connected by some special feature, such as being record breakers, where they live, mimicry, even harboring some stealthy strategy for survival.

Just a quick dip into the pages, led me to the Nudibranch, a blue sea slug that devours animals larger than it is, “including the highly venomous Portuguese man-o-war,” from which it “. . . stores the stinging nematocysts . . . in the tips of its extremities [and] uses these stinging ‘fingers’ to defend itself when necessary.”

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Image copyright Kaja Kajfež, Santiago Calle, Mateo Markov and Max Rambaldi, 2023. Text copyright Miranda Smith, 2023. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

I also met the Tiger Quoll, a creature of the rainforest that travels for miles each night in search of food, and the Peacock Mantis Shrimp, a colorful but fearsome 7-inch long crustacean that moves so fast it can “hit prey, such as a crab, with a force that smashes its shell” and which can create “bubbles in the water as hot as the sun, causing a shockwave strong enough to stun or kill.” I finally had to say auld lang syne to the year with the Asian Elephant and a view of a mother elephant and her youngster foraging for the “up to 285 pounds of vegetation” they each will eat that day. 

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Image copyright Kaja Kajfež, Santiago Calle, Mateo Markov and Max Rambaldi, 2023. Text copyright Miranda Smith, 2023. Courtesy of Bright Matter Books.

But why should I have all the fun? Just imagine the wide-eyes, the “wow!”s, and the eager anticipation for the next day’s animal that your kids will experience as they meet each of these distinctive creatures through Miranda Smith’s clear, accessible, and captivating text for all ages. Each entry is punctuated with the kinds of nifty details that enthrall children and get them excited to learn more.

Accompanying each animal’s description is a lifelike drawing of the creature in its environment. Colorful and active, these illustrations allow kids to really bond with each animal and understand the whys and hows of their behaviors. In the case of the Amazon Leaf Fish, it may even take a moment before readers see the camouflaged fish among the dead leaves sunk beneath the water. The double-page spreads with their black backgrounds and highlighted animals are worthy of natural history museum displays and will entice readers to stop and stay awhile.

An Animal a Day would make a much-appreciated gift for any animal-loving child and is a must for public and school library collections as well as elementary school classrooms.

Ages 5 – 10 and up

Bright Matter Books, 2024 | ISBN 978-0593903353

Read a New Book Month Activity

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Animal Coloring Pages

Enjoy these coloring pages of some favorite animals!

Giraffe and Elephant on the Savanah | Hanging Snake | Tiger

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You can purchase An Animal a Day at these booksellers

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop (to support your local independent bookstore)

Picture Book Review