Brave baby hummingbird

Sy Montgomery

Book - 2024

"The story of a hummingbird's early life and how they make their way into the world"--

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j598.764/Montgomery
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Subjects
Genres
Anecdotes
Juvenile works
Illustrated works
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Sy Montgomery (author)
Other Authors
Tiffany Bozic (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"A Paula Wiseman Book."
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 32 cm
Audience
Ages 4-8
Grades 2-3
ISBN
9781665918497
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Tiny but superstrong and extremely fast, hummingbirds can fly long distances, yet they can also hover in the air. They can fly up, down, sideways, and even upside down. In this beautiful picture book, a hummingbird shares his memories of growing up alongside his older sister, who hatched two days earlier. The two birds, originally the size of bumblebees, hatch from navy bean--sized eggs in a quarter-sized nest. When they feel a breeze, they open their mouths so that their mother can feed them. One day, she does not return, but someone takes them to a bird rehabilitation center, where a caregiver blows on them and feeds them. The younger hummingbird watches his sister take flight and find her own food. Soon both fly free. They migrate and, after returning, find mates. The back matter offers further information about these amazing animals and how people can help them. A naturalist with a gift for helping readers imagine what they may never have touched or even seen, Montgomery writes in ways that immediately bring the birds' qualities into focus, such as, "I am made mostly of air--like a bubble wrapped in feathers." Painted on wood with acrylics, the illustrations are vibrantly colorful and wonderfully detailed. A captivating bird book.

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

Two baby Allen's hummingbirds, alone in a coin-size nest, thrive with human assistance in an informational rescue story that hints at fledglings' fortitude. Montgomery narrates earnestly from the perspective of a male bird emerging from eggs with his sister, "the size of bumblebees." But when the breeze that suggests their mother's arrival stops, "We are scared, cold, and hungry." The next morning, a human hand cradles the babies, and human lips blow from the page margin, simulating wingbeats. "I'm not a mother hummingbird, but I've spent ten years learning how to help orphans like you," they are told, before moving to a Hummingbird Hotel that affords them safety to test their wings, sip nectar, and eat fruit flies until they're ready to re-enter the wild. As they migrate south and return to their birthplace, meticulous illustrations by Bozic, crisply detailed in acrylic paint on wood, accurately depict the duo across habitats and alongside other hummingbird species. Ages 4--8. (Mar.)

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

Acting as narrator, a young hummingbird describes his first year, beginning when "my older sister and I hatch, two days apart, from eggs as small as navy beans." They feel a breeze "many times a day," signaling that food is coming. And then one day it doesn't. The two wait, cold and hungry, until the next morning when the breeze returns. Here listeners must infer what has happened; a human hand lifts their tiny nest and uses a syringe to feed the babies. They are orphans, now living in a hummingbird rescue center and gradually learning the skills they will need to survive in the larger world. Realistic and delicate, Bozic's depictions of the main points in the narrative (learning how to hover, sip nectar, and catch insects) are rendered in acrylic paint on wood with the birds placed in natural settings and poses, resembling the best of scientific illustrations. Readers follow the two as they make their way in the world, migrate south for the winter, and then return to find mates. An author's note explains that this touching success story is based on an observed hummingbird rescue. Montgomery outlines ways to save such abandoned birds (clearly emphasizing that readers shouldn't try this at home) and the many resources available to help these tiny animals of the Americas. Also appended are facts about hummingbirds, including their size and habitats. Betty CarterMarch/April 2024 p.113 (c) Copyright 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

An orphaned hummingbird tells his story. In this addition to a shelf full of successful invitations to wonder at the natural world, Montgomery presents a hummingbird's life from the bird's perspective. She bases her account on the lives of two real-life Allen's hummingbirds, raised by an experienced rehabilitator. An orphaned nestling describes how a rescuer ("The Voice") nurtured him and his sister until they were grown. He describes learning to feed himself nectar and catch fruit flies and moving from perching to actual flying--hovering and flying backward and even upside down! "No other bird can do that," he brags. In the fall, the two birds journey south to Mexico, returning to California in December to raise another generation. Grown hummingbirds, he exults, "rule the sky." The writer has chosen details that are accurate, appropriate, and appealing for the audience. One moment may be confusing for young readers; soon after hatching, the avian narrator says that "every twenty minutes, we wait for the breeze. Food!" It isn't clear from the text that the nestlings are reacting to the breeze from the mother's flapping wings, though on the next spread, we see the shadowy face of the rehabilitator blowing on their basket. While adults may need to add some context, overall, it's an enticing, enlightening tale, featuring gloriously detailed illustrations. A charming bird's-eye view of one bird's rescue and rehabilitation. (author's note, hummingbird highlights, helping hummingbirds) (Informational picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.