Wonder wings Guess who's flying

Rebecca E. Hirsch

Book - 2025

"Wings can soar and wings can skim. Wings can hover, hum, and swim. Small wings, big wings, near and far. Can you guess whose wings these are? Some wings make music, some wings move too fast to see, and some wings carry people all over the world. Can you guess who these wings belong to? Learn about the wonderous world of wings through rhyming riddles that will encourage little readers to guess along with every page turn. From hummingbirds to pterosaurs, honeybees to maple seeds-each pair of wings is unique, and each gets its due in this delightful nonfiction picture book"--

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Subjects
Genres
Riddles
Published
New York : Abrams Books for Young Readers 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Rebecca E. Hirsch (author)
Other Authors
Sally Soweol Han (illustrator)
Physical Description
pages cm
Audience
Ages 4 to 8
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781419769252
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Soaring rhymes celebrate wings of many sorts as an equally diverse cast of bright-eyed young children look on. "Small wings, big wings, near and far. / Can you guess whose wings these are?" Offering tantalizing hints about each example until a page turn reveals the answer, Hirsch writes of honeybees and katydids, hummingbirds and mallards--but also expands her topic well beyond bugs and birds to encompass winged things from maple seeds to pterosaurs and jet planes. As she explains in a substantial afterword, each uses wings in distinctive ways. Penguin chicks don't fly, for instance, but steer with their flippers as they toboggan down ice slopes on their bellies, and butterflies flap in a figure-eight pattern, clapping their wings to create a propulsive puff of air. Individual readers and listening audiences alike will come away understanding the structural differences between the wings of bats and birds, not to mention how lift can be created by both wing curvature and by the "tiny tornado" that forms over the flat surface of a maple "whirlybird." Han mixes brightly hued close-ups of flora and fauna with views of small children immersed in peaceful natural settings, being strapped into their seats, or, in one fetching scene, donning wings themselves to flit cheerily about. A nicely balanced combination of guessing game and scientific facts. (selected sources)(Informational picture book. 6-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.