Wicked bugs The meanest, deadliest, grossest bugs on earth

Amy Stewart

Book - 2017

"Wicked Bugs: The Meanest, Deadliest, Grossest Bugs on Earth is a middle-grade adaptation of Amy Stewart's Wicked Bugs that features profiles of the world's scariest, deadliest, and grossest bugs, from the most painful hornet to flies that transmit deadly diseases to millipedes that stop traffic, to "bookworms" that devour libraries. With its featured bugs organized by categories that match the upper elementary science curriculum, this humorous, fascinating, and seriously icky book will has color illustrations throughout"--

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Subjects
Published
Chapel Hill, North Carolina : Algonquin Young Readers 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Amy Stewart (author)
Other Authors
Briony Morrow-Cribbs (illustrator)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xi, 177 pages : color illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781616207557
9781616206994
  • Brazilian wandering spider
  • Tsetse fly
  • Assassin bug
  • Mosquito
  • Oriental rat flea
  • Curse of the scorpion
  • Cockroach
  • Deer tick
  • Bed bug
  • Body lice
  • Head lice
  • The enemy within
  • Nightcrawler
  • Brown marmorated stink bug
  • African bat bug
  • Millipede
  • Zombies
  • Death-watch beetle
  • Rocky mountain locust
  • Mountain pine beetle
  • Formosan subterranean termite
  • Corpse eaters
  • Asian giant hornet
  • Paederus beetle
  • Brown recluse
  • Giant centipede
  • Scabies mite
  • Bombardier beetle
  • Tarantula
  • Stinging caterpillars
  • The ants go marching
  • Black widow
  • Chigoe flea
  • Chigger mite
  • Sand fly
  • Black fly
  • Filth fly
  • I've got you under my skin
  • Fear of bugs.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-8-With over one million species of insects identified globally and over 10 quintillion live insects, there are a lot of bugs in the world! Stewart writes about the creepy crawlies that most negatively impact humans in this young reader's edition of her 2011 adult book by the same name. Dividing the content into six categories, ("Everyday Dangers," "Destructive Pests," etc.), Stewart begins each one with a full-page illustration. Entries are approximately three pages long and contain a mixture of scientific information (size, scientific family name, habitat, etc.) as well as human-interest anecdotes. Juicy tidbits, such as the story of a woman who thought she was undergoing brain surgery to remove a deadly tumor and instead woke up to find that a pork tapeworm had been the culprit, will keep readers engaged and turning the pages. (Finding the pork tapeworm instead of a tumor was apparently good news.) Resources listed at the conclusion include online sources to aid in insect identification, a catalog of the best insectariums, and information on pest control and insect-related diseases. VERDICT Budding entomologists and kids who marvel in the truly awe-inspiring, sometimes hair-raising, and gross natural world will be in heaven.-Ragan O'Malley, Saint Ann's School, Brooklyn © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

In this young readers' edition of Stewart's adult title, each "wicked" bug gets multi-page coverage including habitat, characteristics, dangers, and (often) an anecdote involving human encounters. There are no source notes and almost all the bibliographic resources are at least ten years old. Still, the lively guide will appeal to budding entomologists or kids who love the gross and scary. Websites. Bib., glos., ind. (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

This junior edition of Stewart's lurid 2011 portrait gallery of the same name (though much less gleeful subtitle) loses none of its capacity for leaving readers squicked-out.The author drops a few entries, notably the one on insect sexual practices, and rearranges toned-down versions of the rest into roughly topical sections. Beginning with the same cogent observation"We are seriously outnumbered"she follows general practice in thrillers of this ilk by defining "bug" broadly enough to include all-too-detailed descriptions of the life cycles and revolting or deadly effects of scorpions and spiders, ticks, lice, and, in a chapter evocatively titled "The Enemy Within," such internal guests as guinea worms and tapeworms. Mosquitoes, bedbugs, the ubiquitous "Filth Fly," and like usual suspects mingle with more-exotic threats, from the tongue-eating louse and a "yak-killer hornet" (just imagine) to the aggressive screw-worm fly that, in one cited case, flew up a man's nose and laid hundreds of eggsthathatched. Morrow-Cribbs' close-up full-color drawings don't offer the visceral thrills of the photos in, for instance, Rebecca L. Johnson's Zombie Makers (2012) but are accurate and finely detailed enough to please even the fussiest young entomologists. Entomophobes will find all of this horrifyingly informative. (index, glossary, resource lists) (Nonfiction. 11-14) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.