Tiny monsters The strange creatures that live on us, in us, and around us

Steve Jenkins

Book - 2020

Did you know you share your home with monsters?! In this book explore the menagerie of tiny and unusual creatures--arthropods (insects, mites, and spiders)--found in our lawns and gardens, our food, our beds, our clothes, and even our eyelashes. Some of these monsters are so tiny that they were barely recognized, even by scientists, until the invention of the electron microscope. Although they may seem like aliens from another planet, these miniscule creatures live right alongside us. And just about all of them are harmless--and some are even helpful!

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Subjects
Genres
Instructional and educational works
Picture books
Published
Boston : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Steve Jenkins (author)
Other Authors
Robin Page (author)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9780358307112
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Jenkins and Page introduce readers to 24 tiny creatures that live outdoors, in our houses, and on our bodies. Using brief text and multiple visual perspectives, they present organisms such as the dragon springtail (a rain forest--floor dweller that feeds on molds and plants), the common furniture beetle (which eats wooden household items), marine scale worms (which live near volcanic vents on the ocean floor), and eyelash mites (harmless arthropods living at the base of human eyelashes). Jenkins' cut-and-torn-paper collages (some highly magnified) are particularly effective in depicting minute features that would not be visible with the naked eye. He uses striking color combinations that will draw in young readers, although he admits they may not be accurate, as his sources (electron micrographs) depict only black and white. While a few of these tiny monsters may be familiar (fleas, mosquitoes, deer ticks, head lice), most will be new to readers. Appended with additional information on each species, this will be welcomed in primary science units, and browsers will appreciate its "yuck" factor.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This sophisticated illustrated guide to the "world of tiny, fantastic creatures that we seldom notice" provides zoomed-in views (each illustration notes the magnification) of bristly textures, jointed legs, intimidating pinchers, and eyes alongside "actual size" illustrations and brief text snippets that note remarkable facts. The pages feature creatures familiar (deer ticks, head lice, cat fleas) and more esoteric (armored snout mites, dragon springtails), rendered in Jenkins's cut-and-torn paper collage style and presented crisply against empty backgrounds. While the creatures' brilliant colors "aren't always realistic" (a footnote explains that the images are based on black-and-white electron microscope images), their strange, surreal, and sometimes alarming forms mesmerize. The text provides just enough substance to spark readers' fascination with these "tiny monsters" that live alongside humans. Includes a closing infographic with "More Tiny Monster Facts." Ages 6--9. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

Jenkins and Page (The Frog Book, rev. 1/19) team up to tackle a subject that may make your skin crawl -- while introducing you to what's crawling on your skin. Each tiny, often microscopic organism described here is boldly illustrated with cut-and-torn-paper collage and magnified as much as four hundred times its actual size. This allows the viewer to see each and every hair on the zebra jumping spider's body, or the walrus-like tusks on the cat flea. Some "tiny monsters" will be familiar, such as the bedbug or head louse. Others will seem as if they're from another planet entirely (take a look at the marine scale worm...or don't). The text accompanying each organism is brief but succinct, and additional information about each of the twenty-four creatures included is given at book's end. Perhaps appropriately, the authors provide a warning on the first page: "After meeting some of these tiny monsters, you may never look at your cereal, your pillow, or your eyelashes in quite the same way." Hill Saxton November/December 2020 p.126(c) Copyright 2020. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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

Illustrations based on microscope images reveal a world of fantastic, sometimes frightening-looking creatures who share our world. Jenkins' familiar collage illustrations, set on stark backgrounds, seem ideally suited for display of the monsters in miniature described in this latest offering. From the alien-appearing thistle mantis to the roly-poly tardigrade, he gives readers multiple views of faces, feelers, teeth, and claws, all highly enlarged; the creature's overall appearance; and its original size. There are worms that live inside us, mites that live on our outsides, insects that bite us, and intriguing creatures whose lives have nothing obvious to do with ours, including a marine scale worm that lives at a volcanic vent deep in the Pacific Ocean. Each is introduced with a lighthearted headline ("It's a Sleepover!" for the house dust mites that live in pillows and bed linens). Most creatures get a single page; a few get a full double-page spread. The extent of enlargement is always noted; some actual sizes are too small to see. An illustrator's note explains that the electron microscope images are black and white; the illustrator used color "to highlight the forms and details" of the microscopic creatures; but the dragon springtail's blue body and orange spines are accurate. Alas, the book has no page numbers, but the thumbnail images accompanying further information on each critter in the backmatter correspond to the order in which the animals appear. Another impressive outing by a popular pair. (Informational picture book. 4-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.