Humanimal Incredible ways animals are just like us!

Christopher Lloyd, 1968-

Book - 2019

"So you think you're special? Just because people have built cities, invented pop-up toasters, and put people on the Moon, that they are somehow different from (or better than) other living things? Well, it's time to think again! Humanimal explores the interconnections of the human and natural worlds in ways you never before imagined... Inside you will discover how slime molds learn how to navigate through a maze; how rats are ticklish and how it makes them laugh out loud; how elephants have funerals for their lost loved ones; how bees vote in elections to decide where to locate their nests; how crows use cars to crack nuts and a whole lot more! This richly illustrated, mesmerizing exploration shows that humans and other anim...als don't just live on the same planet, they also share many of the same patterns of behavior, making us all fellow players in the drama that is life on Earth. Fascinating and stunningly illustrated, Humanimal explores and celebrates the astonishing ways in which animals and humans are alike."--Publisher's description.

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Subjects
Genres
Instructional and educational works
Picture books
Published
Tonbridge, Kent, United Kingdom ; Greenbelt, Maryland, United States : WoEB, What On Earth Books 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Christopher Lloyd, 1968- (author)
Other Authors
Mark Ruffle (illustrator)
Physical Description
47 pages : color illustrations ; 29 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 47) and index.
ISBN
9781912920013
9781912920006
  • Community
  • Teamwork
  • Farming
  • City living
  • Having fun
  • Showing off
  • Feelings
  • Love
  • Aggression
  • Grief
  • Intelligence
  • Self-awareness
  • Language
  • Deception
  • Puzzle solving
  • Invention.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 2--6--Most readers know that bees can communicate with one another and that elephants have graveyards, but Lloyd's exploration of animals goes further, with details about farming fish and playful ravens. For each topic (community, feelings, intelligence), the author offers examples of animals that engage in behavior similar to humans' and describes the scientists who made these discoveries. Illustrations are detailed and engaging. Text is informative enough for research and readable. Comparisons between human and animal behavior are drawn well, leading readers to exciting conclusions about our relationship with the animal world. An excellent glossary, a long index, and a detailed list of sources make this a fantastic resource, but the segment on the many scientists who contributed to the research really put this title over the top. VERDICT A fun and thought-provoking look at animals that are just like us. An excellent choice for any nonfiction collection.--Savannah Kitchens, Parnell Memorial Library, Montevallo, AL

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Eye-opening discoveries for readers who think only humans grieve, play, or admire themselves in mirrors.Claiming the titular word (wrongly) as his own coinage, Lloyd develops the theme that many animals display behavior or characteristics once thought exclusively human, from living in cities (termites) to feeling emotions like love and grief (elephants, bonobos). The author extends commonly seen examples: Yes, as Jane Goodall has proven, chimps do use tools, but so do Australian black kites, which have been seen carrying burning sticks from fires to nearby grasslands to stir up prey. He also points to observations of bees communally deciding on where to establish a new hive; ravens repeatedly rolling down hills for, evidently, fun; and even slime molds showing a knack for constructing networks between food sources that rival for efficiency anything that civil engineers can concoct. In many reports he names animal researchers (though all but two of the 15 in his closing biographical gallery are white and European or American) and describes specific incidents or experiments. Ruffle adds big, boldly hued views of stylized but expressively posed, easily recognizable creatures against monochromatic or simplified natural backgrounds. The rare human figures are nearly all actual portraits.Convincing evidence that the boundaries between us and them aren't all that sharp. (index, selected scientific publications) (Informational picture book. 7-10) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.