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CROSSINGS by Katy S.  Duffield Kirkus Star

CROSSINGS

Extraordinary Structures for Extraordinary Animals

by Katy S. Duffield ; illustrated by Mike Orodán

Pub Date: Oct. 13th, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5344-6579-4
Publisher: Beach Lane/Simon & Schuster

All over the world, humans build crossings to allow wildlife to pass freely over, under, across, and through busy highways.

Overpasses, underpasses, even rope bridges are the focus of this intriguing informational picture book. Duffield provides 12 examples of animal passages built for regular use or seasonal migration. A particularly nice touch is the map at the end, a shadowy map of continents with each animal appropriately placed and a few more facts about their situations. Elephants, pangolins, red crabs, koalas, squirrel gliders, and blue penguins come from the Eastern Hemisphere; elk, black bears, spotted salamanders, coyotes, panthers, and titi monkeys from the Western. Clean, crisp illustrations on double-page spreads show well, making this a good choice for a group read-aloud. There’s a two-level text, a simple sentence in a large font stating animal, crossing technology, and location, the smaller paragraphs providing further information about planning, specialized building, and uses. One early spread focuses on construction, showing a gender- and racially diverse human team and several big machines—drawing in readers and listeners more interested in equipment than animals. The story in pictures is nicely rounded, beginning with a question about the fate of a mother panther and her cub facing a car on a highway and ending with mother and cub safe on a cliff high above it. Readers can see the arching bridge that made that possible. (This book was reviewed digitally with 11-by-22-inch double-page spreads viewed at 85.5% of actual size.)

An unusual focus on one way humans and animals can coexist in our world.

(bibliography) (Informational picture book. 3-7)