A Butterfly Is Patient
(Libby/OverDrive eBook)
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Description
From the creators of the award-winning An Egg Is Quiet, A Seed Is Sleepy, and A Rock Is Lively comes this gorgeous and informative introduction to the world of butterflies.
Part of the incredible six-book Nature Books series from the award-winning duo of Dianna Hutts Aston and Sylvia Long, A Butterfly Is Patient celebrates a dazzling variety of butterflies in all their beauty and wonder.Turn each page to explore the amazing world of these beautiful winged insects through watercolor illustrations that bring to life garden landscapes filled with flowers, vines, leaves, and sunshine.
A BUTTERFLY BOOK TO TREASURE: From the tiny Western Pygmy blue butterfly to the grand Queen Alexandra’s birdwing, from the iridescent blue swallowtail to the brilliant orange monarch, curious kids will find a wealth of information and inspiration in this fascinating picture book.PRESCHOOL AND KINDERGARTEN READERS: Poetic in voice and elegant in design, each volume in this unique series of nature book for kids is sure to inspire lively questions and observations from young listeners. Like the best nonfiction books for children, they are equally at home being read to a child on a parent’s lap as they are in a classroom reading circle.BUTTERFLY GARDEN INSPIRATION: Families have embraced the fun of growing their own butterflies and witnessing their amazing life cycle with caterpillar to butterfly kits. Planting backyard butterfly gardens to provide welcoming habitats is also gaining in popularity nationwide. This book is a perfect companion to DIY butterfly kits and garden starters.
Perfect for:
- Parents, teachers, librarians, and homeschool educators
- Young and emerging readers with an interest in insects, nature, and gardening
- Fans of National Geographic kids' books, Eric Carle books, Danica McKellar's Ten Magic Butterflies, and Up in the Garden and Down in the Dirt and others in the Over and Under series
- Gift giving for birthday, Easter, springtime or summer reading for boys and girls who love books about butterflies, bugs, animals, and nature
More Details
Also in this Series
Published Reviews
Booklist Review
Following closely the presentation of An Egg Is Quiet (2006) and A Seed Is Sleepy (2007), this lovely and engaging book is devoted to the beautiful butterfly and its metamorphosis. Each double-page spread focuses on an attribute: patient, helpful, protective, and so on. The information about each phase is concise and loaded with interesting factual tidbits and each butterfly is carefully labeled, too. From the endpapers, featuring 32 caterpillars (in the front) and 34 butterflies (in the back), to the detailed page-by-page depictions, the realistic acrylic illustrations are consistently elegant.--Cummins, Julie Copyright 2010 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
This companion to An Egg Is Quiet and A Seed Is Sleepy is as delicate, elegant, and informative as its predecessors. Under headings that echo the book's title ("A butterfly is helpful," "A butterfly is poisonous"), Aston explores the development, habits, migration, and attributes of one of nature's flashier, yet familiar creations. Long's watercolors are precise but enchanting as ever, especially in the "A butterfly is spectacular!" spread, which shows the colorful diversity of more than a dozen specimens, and in another devoted to the migration of monarch butterflies, seen swarming over a quiet desert. A lovely mix of science and wonder. Ages 5-8. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
School Library Journal Review
K-Gr 3-A companion to the equally stylish An Egg Is Quiet (Chronicle, 2006), this lovely combination of elegant watercolors and lyrical text is both eye-catching and informative. Readers follow the creatures from egg to flight as Aston takes them through the process of metamorphosis while describing various behavioral traits. With wing scales "stacked like shingles on a roof," the butterflies come to life. While noting differences between moths and butterflies, the author makes no mention of the former's "fluffier" antennae, and there is no definition for the term "instar" (which appears in an illustration caption). The Monarch migration gets a star turn, along with a veritable litany of names-Diana Fritillary, Ruddy Daggerwing, Painted Jezebel, and Elbowed Pierrot-as worthy of recitation as the dinosaur appellations so beloved of children. A lyrical, colorful, and elegant production.-Patricia Manning, formerly at Eastchester Public Library, NY (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Horn Book Review
A statement, in curlicue type, stating what "a butterfly is" introduces each spread in this poetic picture book. The text that follows explains why a butterfly is "creative" (it engineers its metamorphosis), "helpful" (it pollinates plants), or "protective" (it guards itself with its wings). Nicely detailed, well-labeled illustrations--less anthropomorphized than the text--never forget to highlight butterflies' beauty. (c) Copyright 2011. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Book Review
Another interwoven flight of poetry, natural history and lovely art from the creators ofAn Egg Is Quiet(2006) andA Seed Is Sleepy(2007).Beneath hand-scripted headers that sometimes take license with facts but create lyrical overtones ("A butterfly is creative"), Aston offers specific and accurate descriptions of metamorphosis, pollination, camouflage, migration and other butterfly features and functions, along with the differences between butterflies and moths. Imagination-stretching comparisons"monarchs weigh only as much as a few rose petals," the wingspan of the Arian Small Blue is "about the length of a grain of rice"lend wings to the body of facts, and though the author avoids direct mention of reproduction or death, a quick closing recapitulation that harks back to the opening page's hatching egg provides an artful hint of life's cyclical pattern. With finely crafted, carefully detailed close-up watercolors, Long depicts dozens of caterpillars and butterflies, each one posed to best advantage, unobtrusively labeled and so lifelike that it's almost a surprise to page back and find them in the same positions.Similar butterfly albums abound, but none show these most decorative members of the insect clan to better advantage.(Informational picture book. 8-10)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
"Following closely the presentation of An Egg Is Quiet (2006) and A Seed Is Sleepy (2007), this lovely and engaging book is devoted to the beautiful butterfly and its metamorphosis. Each double-page spread focuses on an attribute: "patient," "helpful," "protective," and so on. The information about each phase is concise and loaded with interesting factual tidbits—and each butterfly is carefully labeled, too. From the endpapers, featuring 32 caterpillars (in the front) and 34 butterflies (in the back), to the detailed page-by-page depictions, the realistic acrylic illustrations are consistently elegant." Copyright 2011 Booklist Reviews.
Publishers Weekly Reviews
This companion to An Egg Is Quiet and A Seed Is Sleepy is as delicate, elegant, and informative as its predecessors. Under headings that echo the book's title ("A butterfly is helpful," "A butterfly is poisonous"), Aston explores the development, habits, migration, and attributes of one of nature's flashier, yet familiar creations. Long's watercolors are precise but enchanting as ever, especially in the "A butterfly is spectacular!" spread, which shows the colorful diversity of more than a dozen specimens, and in another devoted to the migration of monarch butterflies, seen swarming over a quiet desert. A lovely mix of science and wonder. Ages 5–8. (June)
[Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLCSchool Library Journal Reviews
K-Gr 3—A companion to the equally stylish An Egg Is Quiet (Chronicle, 2006), this lovely combination of elegant watercolors and lyrical text is both eye-catching and informative. Readers follow the creatures from egg to flight as Aston takes them through the process of metamorphosis while describing various behavioral traits. With wing scales "stacked like shingles on a roof," the butterflies come to life. While noting differences between moths and butterflies, the author makes no mention of the former's "fluffier" antennae, and there is no definition for the term "instar" (which appears in an illustration caption). The Monarch migration gets a star turn, along with a veritable litany of names—Diana Fritillary, Ruddy Daggerwing, Painted Jezebel, and Elbowed Pierrot—as worthy of recitation as the dinosaur appellations so beloved of children. A lyrical, colorful, and elegant production.—Patricia Manning, formerly at Eastchester Public Library, NY
[Page 82]. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Aston, D. H., & Long, S. (2013). A Butterfly Is Patient . Chronicle Books LLC.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Aston, Dianna Hutts and Sylvia Long. 2013. A Butterfly Is Patient. Chronicle Books LLC.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Aston, Dianna Hutts and Sylvia Long. A Butterfly Is Patient Chronicle Books LLC, 2013.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Aston, D. H. and Long, S. (2013). A butterfly is patient. Chronicle Books LLC.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Aston, Dianna Hutts, and Sylvia Long. A Butterfly Is Patient Chronicle Books LLC, 2013.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
---|---|---|---|
Libby | 1 | 1 | 0 |