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Newborns

How Baby Animals Come Into the World

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

Did you know that Darwin's frogs hatch as tadpoles in their father's mouth? Or that a baby giraffe has to survive a six-foot fall because its mother is standing when it's born?

What about how a baby dolphin has to swim up to the surface immediately after it's born to take its first breath? Some gestation periods are days; some are years. Some babies are born ready to fend for themselves while others rely on their parents for months. From scorpions to ravens to red kangaroos, all animals have their own miraculous processes to keep their species thriving. With its sweet, striking artwork and fascinating facts about 25 diverse animals, Newborns: How Baby Animals Come into the World is a great introduction to animal behavior for young readers.

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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2025
      Translated from Spanish, a lighthearted celebration of the miracle of birth, from being spit out by a daddy Darwin's frog to a baby giraffe's six-foot drop to the ground. With the avowed intention of showing "how wondrous and diverse--and cute!--the natural world is," the author recaps common natal experiences for 25 animals, accompanied by Gal�'s fluidly drawn cartoon portraits, mostly of smiling parents and offspring together. The breezy tone is decidedly infectious. Jara describes a mating dance between scorpions that eventually results in "scorplings," commends the young of the paradoxically named seven-arm octopus, who are immediately ready to float off and "make their mother proud," and coos that opossums give birth to "around 20 teeny joeys" at a time. Some newlings are born nearly helpless, while others are fully ready to strike out on their own. Amazingly, the armadillo can put active pregnancies on hold, while the alpine salamander's gestation varies, depending on the altitude at which it lives (two years for those living at 3,200 feet and three years for those that reside even higher). These and other airy facts set a mellow mood for the final animal babies, which are the human ones--"the only living creatures that smile intentionally at their parents," the author writes fetchingly. The sleeping infant has light pink skin. Adds both perspective and a positive spin on a universal experience. (glossary)(Informational picture book. 6-8)

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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