We’ve curated a list of some truly wonderful and entertaining bug books for kids ages 4 to 99. We’ve also included the game Bug Bingo, and it’s the bees-knees.
Browsing: Environment & Ecology
Have a peek inside the studio of Tracy Bishop, Illustrator of Pipsie, Nature Detective: The Lunchnapper.
Which five words best describe The Slowest Book Ever?
April Pulley Sayre: Chewy science for wondrous pondering.
A new book, Climate Change: Discover How It Impacts Spaceship Earth aims to bring the climate change discussion to the family kitchen table and science classroom.
Climate Change: Discover How It Impacts Spaceship Earth, a book for middle grade students, aims to bring the discussion about climate change to the family kitchen table and science classroom.
Dig In!, by Cindy Jenson-Elliott is all about digging in and getting to know our own little part of the planet.
Complete with bush walks and a vegemite sandwich, Johnny Foolish is an Australian tale worthy of a read—too right!
How to Outfox Your Friends When You Don’t Have a Clue is the third book in the ‘My Life is a Zoo” series written by Jess Keating.
Artist and naturalist Jim Arnosky has been honored for his overall contribution to literature for children by the Eva L. Gordon Award and the Washington Post/Children’s Book Guild Award for nonfiction. His latest book is “Frozen Wild.”
In The Oak Tree, written by J. Steven Spires and illustrated by Jonathan Caron, the reader is given the opportunity to revisit the devastation wrought by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita on the Gulf Coast 10 years ago.