Dive into the beauty of nature and discover more about the amazing animal groups of North America in this jaw-dropping find-the-hidden-picture book written by Caroline Fernandez and illustrated by Erin Mercer. Find the butterfly and other unique animals in each page to learn more about the fauna of our continent!
Features
đŠ Full-colour illustrations with hidden animals to seek
đ Definitions and fun facts about the animals
đ§ Matching, research, and hands-on activities
Contents
đ 1 softcover book
Details
Ages: 4 -7
Language: English
Dimensions: 8.75âx11.25â
ISBN: 978-1772057393
REVIEWS
Reviewer: Dave Jenkinson, Canadian Review of Materialsâ editor, Winnipeg, Manitoba.
The premise of Hide and Seek: Wild Animal Groups in North America is that a Monarch butterfly has become separated from the rest of its fellow butterflies and has gone in search of them. In various settings along its search path, the solitary butterfly encounters 26 other North American animals, and readers learn the collective term given each animal group that the butterfly meets. Mercerâs opening illustration of the butterfly appears to situate it in what seems to be an icy background. Turning the page provides confirmation as the double page spread is a snowy Arctic setting, one that is literally overrun by wolves and hares, with Fernandezâs text reading:
A pack of arctic wolves
A dawn of arctic hares>
The reason for the surfeit of wolves and hares is found in the remainder of Fernandezâs text which is set off in a box located at the bottom right corner of the recto. In this instance, it reads:
Find this wolf, this hare and a butterfly.
Where is the rock shaped like a hare?
The textâs âthisâ is made concrete by a Mercer illustration which specifies which of the numerous wolves or hares the child reader is to locate.
This pattern of the readerâs having to find four things in each spread, with one always being the butterfly, is repeated a dozen times. Ultimately, young readers are introduced to a total of 27 collective nouns. The last spread finds the Monarch butterfly successfully reunited with its âflutterâ.
The settings for the animal pairings have an internal logic, and so a âlapâ of polar cod and a âblessingâ of narwhals share an ice berg dotted ocean while a âherdâ of moose and an âearthâ of red foxes wander through a forest. A nighttime forest is also home to some nocturnal animals â a âgazeâ of racoons and a âparliamentâ of snowy owls. A lake or river hosts a âshoalâ of bass and a âscourgeâ of mosquitoes, and an open field welcomes a âstringâ of ponies and a âkineâ of cows.
Because of the bookâs hide and seek nature, Mercerâs illustrations are necessarily âbusyâ, and children will be truly challenged to find the animals or things requested by Fernandez, especially the tiny butterfly. The hide and seek âSolutionsâ page at the end of the book could have been improved upon as all 14 spreads are squished into a single page with red circles indicating the locations of the three âFindâ things and a yellow circle doing the same for the âWhereâ question. Some eyes, especially older ones, may need a magnifying glass in order to confirm answers.
In addition to âSolutionsâ, end matter includes a definition of âcollective nounâ, a listing of the bookâs collective nouns and an invitation to circle the collective nouns âyou heard before reading this bookâ, and 10 additional collective nouns for animals not represented in the book. âAbout the Animalsâ, four pages in length, presents the bookâs animals in alphabetical order and offers brief information about each.
Beaver â A colony of beavers
Beavers can live up to 24 years. They are the largest rodents in North America and can be found in rivers, ponds, lakes, and woodlands, where they build dams.
âLook and Matchâ is really an identification task where âletteredâ images of the bookâs 27 critters are to be matched with its numbered name.
Hide and Seek: Wild Animal Groups in North America, a fun activity book, an introduction to 27 members of the animal world and a vocabulary builder, has its place in home collections and in classrooms. Teachers can build upon this introduction to collective nouns and followup on the bookâs suggestion, âImagine you had to come up with an animal group name. What would it be and for which animal.â
Caroline Fernandez
Caroline Fernandez is an award-winning author of childrenâs books and blog posts. She is the author of Stop Reading This Book, The Adventures of Grandmasaurus (series), Asha and Baz (series) and more! Caroline writes, drinks tea, and bakes in Toronto, ON. She is the proud mother of three bilingual kids.
Twitter and Instagram: @ParentClub
Website: https://parentclub.ca
Erin Mercer
Erin Mercer is an up-and-coming childrenâs book illustrator living in Toronto, Canada, where she also produces greeting cards and fine art for artisan markets. She has even worked for Canadian video game studios!
Her colourful, whimsical aesthetic focuses on characters and storytelling, and she loves to inject humour into her work. She mixes traditional and digital media, merging her background in fine arts and concept art.
She enjoys an active lifestyle, cooking, attending live theatre, and traveling, all of which influence her artwork. See more from Mercer on her website: www.pencilempire.com.