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Little Brown Nut

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Start Small, Think Big sets readers on a journey of discovery, beginning with small miracles of life and connecting them to the big picture of our natural world. Each book features a large fold-out illustration on the final pages.

Little Brown Nut starts small, with a large fruit falling from the tallest tree in the Amazon rainforest. Inside is a little brown Brazil nut, surrounded by 20 others. It sits and waits for an agouti, a rodent with teeth so strong that it can free the nut from its hard casing. The story of the Brazil nut tree and the agouti is told clearly and carefully, with facts about germination, photosynthesis, seed dispersal. The narrative progresses in a way that builds understanding and the gorgeous illustrations bring the story and the science to life

Thinking big, the book shows why the rainforest is important to local people and the wider world. A big fold-out has a world map, an at-a-glance lifecycle, and a Rainforest I-Spy of the animals to take readers back into the book.

This book features a die cut hole in the cover and large fold-out poster at the back of the book.

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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      January 1, 2024
      In an invitation to "Think Big," a fallen Brazil nut explains where it came from and what it will grow into. In Amazon rainforest settings that teem with flora and fauna, Auld and Cooper follow the nut as it is buried and forgotten by an agouti ("like a guinea pig, but with longer legs"), then germinates and over many years grows into a majestic tree that houses wildlife from tiny Brazil-nut poison frogs to harpy eagles. Adding additional details delivered in smaller type to join the nutty narrator, the author describes how the flowers, which have evolved to be accessible only to female orchid bees, are pollinated and become nuts that fall either to grow, to be eaten by animals, or to be gathered by human "casta�eros"--who also protect their livelihoods by helping to protect the trees from illegal loggers. The Brazil nut tree is a "rainforest superstar," she concludes on a foldout page at the end, and can live for a thousand years if allowed. The same foldout features maps of rainforests worldwide, as well as images of animals that appeared in previous scenes for readers to go back and spot. Nutritious and digestible, just like its narrator. (Informational picture book. 6-8)

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2024
      Grades K-3 Welcoming and engaging, the Start Small, Think Big series (2 titles) does a particularly nice job of tracing the life cycle of flora and fauna, while also placing it within a larger environmental context. These UK imports are amiably narrated by their subjects (a nut and a baby bird) as they grow and mature into their adult forms. Little, Brown Nut follows a Brazil nut in a South American rain forest as it falls from its parent tree, is buried by an agouti, sprouts roots, and eventually grows to towering heights. Of particular note is the spread showing the different rain-forest layers and the new tree's position therein. The real wow-factor appears in each book's final spread, which folds out into a four-page display that includes a map, an illustrated recap of the plant or animal life cycle, an "I-Spy" feature that sends kids back through the book, and a "Think Big!" box of big-picture facts.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

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