Wings Birds, bees, biplanes, and other things with wings

Tracey Turner

Book - 2020

"Wings takes readers on a fact-packed flight over a fascinating subject. Written by Tracey Turner, it offers a bird's-eye view of the first airplanes, the fastest jet planes, beetles, birds, winged horses, flying dragons--even winged unicorns. There's fun, easy-to-read information on wings of all kinds, including plenty of STEM material, presented in a mixture of text and speech bubbles that's perfect for readers aged 7 plus. With Fatti Burke's stylish and colorful illustrations, Wings is a wonderful journey of discovery."--Amazon.

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Subjects
Genres
Informational works
Picture books
Published
New York, NY : Kingfisher 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Tracey Turner (author)
Other Authors
Fatti Burke (artist)
Item Description
Includes index.
"A Raspberry book." -- Title page verso.
Physical Description
48 pages : color illustrations ; 28 cm
ISBN
9780753475539
  • Flying insects
  • Butterflies
  • Flying reptiles
  • The first birds
  • Lots of birds
  • Bats
  • Magical wings
  • The flight of Icarus
  • People take off!
  • Gliders
  • Flying machines
  • From biplanes to supersonic planes
  • Planes of the future
  • Helicopters
  • Wings in space
  • Wings that don't fly
  • Flying without wings
  • Wandering albatross wings
  • All sorts of birds.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 2--4--This fun, informative survey of animals and machines with wings delivers. Insects and reptiles; birds and mammals; magical and legendary; man-made--all are here. The accessible table of contents guides readers to any of the two-page chapters; each chapter uses a different color background. Every page is jam-packed with illustrations, text boxes, and speech bubbles. Illustrations of little birds throughout the book offer comical asides, e.g., "These [helicopter] wings are weird." The bats provide facts about their species. A time line snaking across two pages highlights many "firsts," from the first flying insects hundreds of millions of years ago to the first solar-powered flight in 2016. A glossary is lacking, but the index steers readers to topics such as how wings work, unicorns, kakapos (flightless parrots threatened with extinction after cats were introduced into New Zealand), and more. Approachable and engaging language personalizes many of the animals (sugar gliders are referred to as "adorable"). VERDICT A delightful overview of flight that can be opened to any page to enjoy and learn.--Frances E. Millhouser, formerly at Fairfax County P.L., VA

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