Review by Booklist Review
This winsome yet fact-filled picture book opens with a little girl and her father playing with her teddy bears. When one of the bears expresses the wish to "meet his bear family," seven tickets magically appear. Over the next 14 double-page spreads, the girl and her father travel the world, visiting one bear species (polar, black, brown, spectacled, sloth, sun, panda, and moon bears) after another. Keeping their distance to avoid startling the animals, they quietly observe and learn about the bears they're visiting. Each four-page section concludes with the father asking whether her teddy is that sort of bear. Addressing viewers as though they are traveling, too, the conversational text also provides information on each bear's fur, range, food, and hibernation. Additional facts and a global map appear in the helpful back matter. The illustrations, line drawings with color washes, have great warmth, and they show the bears in action within their natural surroundings. Well designed for reading aloud, this informational picture book provides a beguiling introduction to bears.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A parent and child take a worldwide nature tour to meet the eight members of the ursine clan. The trip starts right up as, teddy bear in tow and following a page on which helpful travel and bear-spotting supplies are laid out, the two brown-skinned nature lovers board a boat to cruise past a polar bear in his icy setting. From there it's on to watch a brown bear (from a healthy distance) as she snags salmon from a river for her two cubs, peer cautiously out of a tent as a black bear eats supplies carelessly left on a picnic table, and go on to glimpse a spectacled bear in an Andean cloud forest and other bears in their natural habitats. For each encounter, Hall provides both a full-page close-up illustration and a set of smaller images of paws, foods, poop, or other select details to go with Peridot's descriptive and range notes. And for readers who might be inspired to undertake some bear watching of their own, the importance of staying safe is very properly highlighted, from a first-page comment that bears "are strong. And they can smell you coming from miles away," to a closing set of cautions for proper behavior in bear country. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Savvy and informative--equally suitable for both armchair and open-air expeditions. (information on other bearlike but unrelated animals, list of bears by size, map, websites) (Informational picture book. 6-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.