LoveReading4Kids Says
LoveReading4Kids Says
A beautiful introduction to the many different places that 20 different animals from around the world make their homes. There are many different reasons that a home is chosen but they all have one thing in common: they are safe from predators! Each place is captured in gorgeous illustrations which shows the animals in their special – and sometimes very curious – homes or habitats. The accompanying text is a beautiful descriptive account and also full of facts making the whole a wonderful way of learning and enjoying together.
Julia Eccleshare M.B.E
Find This Book In
Suitable For: |
|
Other Genres: |
|
Recommendations: |
|
About
Finding Home - Amazing Places Animals Live Synopsis
Take a tour of 20 unforgettable animal homes: unearth polar bear dens deep beneath the Arctic snow, soar above eagle nests as big as cars and marvel at the remoras that make themselves comfortable on the ocean's deadliest predators.
Finding Home is a celebration of animals and their drive to survive no matter the odds - finding shelter in every nook and cranny on Earth, from the obvious to the unusual. With rich, vivid non-fiction storytelling and arresting illustrations, this is an essential collection for anyone fascinated by animals and the wild ways they live.
A stunning sequel from Mike Unwin and Jenni Desmond, the internationally bestselling duo behind Migration.
About This Edition
ISBN: |
9781526638281 |
Publication date: |
20th June 2024 |
Author: |
Mike Unwin |
Illustrator: |
Jenni Desmond |
Publisher: |
Bloomsbury Childrens Books an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing PLC |
Format: |
Hardback |
Pagination: |
47 pages |
Suitable For: |
|
Other Genres: |
|
Recommendations: |
|
Press Reviews
Mike Unwin Press Reviews
Praise for Migration;
Mike Unwin and illustrator Jenni Desmond ... know just how to make children’s precious imaginations soar. -- Best Children's Books of 2018 - The Guardian
This non-fiction picture book is a beautifully illustrated, fact-filled goldmine - Children's Book and Media Review
Each double-page spread summons an outstanding example of migration. We’ve seen many of them before, such as the epic flights of arctic terns and wandering albatross, but others are less well known - Redeemed Reader
Desmond’s art, created with watercolour, acrylic, ink, pencil, and pencil crayon, incorporates a paragraph of additional information about each species. It is her images that make this oversize album stand out - Kirkus
Author
About Mike Unwin
Mike Unwin is a freelance writer, editor and illustrator with 12 years' experience in natural history publishing. In 2000 he won the BBC Wildlife travel-writing competition. His children's titles include the bestselling RSPB My First Book of Garden Birds.
Q & A with Mike Unwin
What is your favourite species of bird, and what are its characteristics?
If pressed, I’d have to say Sparrowhawk (with apologies to Dipper, Barn Owl and Black-throated Diver). This dashing bird was hard to find when I was starting birding, even though my bird books described it as ‘common’. Now it seems to be everywhere — yet a sighting always takes me by surprise. Usually it’s just a glimpse of wings and tail, so getting a good look at that fierce glare and those delicate markings is always a thrill. Some misguided people claim that Sparrowhawks need to be ‘controlled’. This just makes me like them even more!
Outside the UK, my favourite bird is probably the Purple-crested Lourie (the national bird of Swaziland, where I once lived). It bounds through the branches, flashing its scarlet wings, and calling raucously from the treetops. A real character.
Where is your favourite birding destination and why?
Favourite childhood haunts hold special memories. These include Thursley Common in Surrey, great for Hobbies, Woodlarks and Dartford Warblers, and Pagham Harbour in Sussex, where I first got to grips with winter waders. I’m also very fond of two RSPB reserves where I was once a volunteer warden — Arne, in Dorset, and Titchwell, in Norfolk — and still feel that the birds know me there! These days though, the northwest coast of Scotland gets my number one vote. Not the biggest variety of birds, but some special species, lots of other great wildlife and the most beautiful backdrop in Britain.
I visited many wonderful birding places while living in Africa. One of my favourites is the Kalahari Trasnfrontier Park — in South Africa and Botswana. I love all the dry country species there, such as coursers, sandgrouse and bustards. It’s also fantastic for birds of prey, and the camps are full of good stuff — from enormous sociable weaver nests to roosting owls.
How did you first become interested in birds and how long have you been a birder?
Birds have been a passion for as long as I can remember. I was certainly already hooked by the age of six (when I remember seeing a Golden Eagle on a family holiday to Scotland). Of course it helped that my family were keen, so we had bird books in the house, fed birds in the garden and looked out for birds on holiday. And my granny gave me her old binoculars, which lasted me for years (though only one eyepiece worked). For me, birds always went hand in hand with drawing — I wanted to draw whatever I saw, and wanted to see whatever I drew. And it’s not only birds: I like all other wildlife too, especially snakes and cats.
More About Mike Unwin