Bugs: A Pop-up Journey into the World of Insects, Spiders and Creepy-crawlies
By (Author) George McGavin
Illustrated by Jim Kay
Walker Books Ltd
Walker Books Ltd
1st November 2013
3rd October 2013
United Kingdom
Children
Non Fiction
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Wildlife and habitats
595
Winner of SLA Information Book Award 2014 (UK)
Hardback
12
Width 240mm, Height 270mm, Spine 15mm
515g
A beautifully illustrated look inside the fascinating world of creepy-crawlies, with stunning three-dimensional pop-ups.
Larger-than-life bugs spring from the pages, peek out from behind flaps and hide under tabs, inviting young entomologists to marvel at the mind-boggling variety of arthropod life. What reader can resist a chance to look inside a cockroachs body to see how it works or open a wasps nest to see whats inside Useful information (why does the world need bees) and scientific trivia (which beetles are strongest and fastest) pack every page, while exquisite art and dramatic pop-ups bring the world of bugs to life.
A sophisticated pop-up guide...stunning illustrations * Books for Keeps *
A never-to-be-forgotten science lesson. * The Guardian *
Offers plenty of thrills . . . magnificent . . . fascinating detail/ * The New York Times Online *
a truly absorbing adventure...a thrillingly involving and detailed book experience * Carousel *
Beautifully crafted...fascinating * Angels and Urchins *
Frightening creepy crawlies leap out of the pages of Bugs, accompanied by explanations of exactly why we need bugs and beautiful illustrations. The un-squeamish eight-plus will love it -- Caroline Franklin * Newbury News Weekly *
An amazing feat of paper engineering that really brings the information to life. Jim Kays illustrations are beautiful and incredibly detailed . . . a lovely book for browsing and mini-beast fans would enjoy reading it from cover-to-cover * The School Librarian *
George McGavin is an author, lecturer, television presenter and explorer. He is an Honorary Research Associate at the world famous Oxford University Museum of Natural History and The Department of Zoology of Oxford University. He has several insect species named in his honour and hopes they survive him. George lives in Ascot, Berkshire. Visit his website at www.georgemcgavin.co.uk.
Jim Kay is the illustrator of the Flaxfield Quartet and won the Kate Greenaway Medal for A Monster Calls, in which he used everything from beetles to breadboards to create interesting marks and textures. He lives in Kettering, Northamptonshire. See more of his work at www.jimkay.co.uk