An overview of birds of prey.
How to teach science in an accessible, nonintimidating way? The Science Comics series has it nailed. This latest offering presents a look at raptors, a family of birds that includes vultures, eagles, condors, hawks, and ospreys, among others. The organization of the material is stellar. In plenty of detail, none of it overwhelming, Flood discusses what raptors are, their evolution from dinosaurs, the physics of flight, raptor biology (for example, their eyes are huge for their body size and can’t swivel in their skulls, and their feet and talons are specifically adapted to their preferred prey), nesting habits, how they catch prey, and the impact of human encroachment. Enlivening the information are full-color illustrations, accurate where they need to be and engagingly playful where they don’t. The story’s narrators, a brown-skinned Renaissance Faire reenactor falconer and a curious squirrel, guide readers through this fascinating worldwide journey that includes meeting John James Audubon, the 19th-century naturalist and painter known for his depictions of birds, and learning about Pale Male, the red-tailed hawk who has made his home on the ledge of a New York City apartment building for 30 years.
A fun, fact-filled romp through the world of raptors.
(glossary) (Nonfiction comic. 9-15)