Everything you might never have wanted to know about water treatment and supply.
Endpapers feature a simple treatment of the water cycle, preparing readers to engage in a deep, detailed look at the way humans interact with the world’s water. “It’s easy not to think about water if you live in a city where it flows from the faucet with a mere flick of the wrist,” the introduction notes, but it’s difficult to forget water’s importance after reading these gentle, informative pages. Brusque brush strokes join muted primary colors to depict urban life in a way that is both realistic and artful. Compositions vary, almost always depicting movement while still leaving space for hefty chunks of text—no small task. Some illustrations show roughly accurate cross sections of above- and belowground environments while others combine huge close-ups with distant backgrounds in an abstract way; once or twice, proportions just seem off. Fun facts (“In every city of a million people, there’s at least $13 million worth of metal in the sewage!”) join sobering observations (“About 90 percent of the watersheds that provide water for the world’s largest cities have been polluted or degraded over the last century”). A “What can we do to help?” closing section lists suggestions for would-be water protectors; 13 are individual lifestyle changes while just two involve collective action. People appear in varied, mostly light or light-brown skin tones. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10.6-by-17.6-inch double-page spreads viewed at 64% of actual size.)
Educational and stylish.
(glossary, bibliography) (Informational picture book. 7-12)