Review by Booklist Review
All winter long, a queen bee lives in a hole in the ground, and inside her body (which is less than an inch long) is "everything she needs to create a whole colony of bees." Gradually, the ground warms in spring, and the bee flies from flower to flower, eating pollen and nectar, finding a nesting place, and laying eggs. The hatchlings go through larval and pupal stages and then emerge as female worker bees, tending to the queen, keeping the nest clean, and collecting food. In late summer, male drones and future queens emerge and find mates from other rusty-patched colonies. After the first frost, most bees die, but those queens will hibernate underground, ready to start colonies next spring. The text is succinct but informative, and its focus broadens from one bee to many as the narrative progresses. The back matter includes more facts about the species and tips for helping bees. The illustrations, detailed scratchboard artwork brightened with watercolor washes, illustrate the science while reflecting the changing seasons. A handsome introduction to an endangered bumblebee.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 4--Beginning with a simple question on a stark black-and-white page, "What's inside this hole in the ground?," authors Ketchum, Jacqueline Briggs Martin, and Phyllis Root, and illustrator McGehee collaborate in producing a beautiful book on the life cycle of the endangered rusty-patched bumblebee. Vivid woodblock illustrations on every page begin with winter scenes of kids playing with snowballs or one very red fox persevering through a snow-packed woods while the small queen bee--"her tiny body (not even an inch)"--waits underground to create a colony of bees. Sparked by leading questions, the rhythmic narrative describes the solitary queen's year as she emerges from the ground in spring, searches for flowers to nourish the eggs that she lays, and feeds them until they mature into female worker bees. These bees toil all through the summer and fall to sustain the queen as she continues laying eggs. Bright purple, blue, and red flowers come and go until the winter when the queen, alone again, goes underground to hibernate as "Seeds drop. Snow falls." A one-page summary provides more information about this species and other bees, and a list of "Ten things we can all do to help" outlines individual actions and group project websites. VERDICT This stunning introduction to an endangered bee native to North America belongs in every collection.--Frances E. Millhouser, formerly at Fairfax County P.L., VA
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review
This account of the rusty-patched bumble bee life cycle is told from the perspective of the queen. The story opens in winter, as a hibernating queen bee awaits the arrival of spring. That single creature's "tiny body (not even an inch) holds everything she needs to create a whole colony of bees." As spring arrives and turns to summer, the meadow environment awakens: plants populate the habitat, other wildlife return, and the bee proceeds to build a nest, start laying eggs, and raise the workers who will attend to her care. McGehee's wonderful scratchboard and watercolor illustrations are bursting with the colors and movements of flora and fauna, yet also delicately detailed in portraying bee anatomy. Even the negative spaces are not quite empty, filled with thin lines that indicate movement in the wind and a dashed line that traces the path of the bee as she finds a place for a nest. By the last days of autumn, just one bee -- a new queen -- is left. The text echoes the introductory pages to emphasize the beginning of a new cycle: "What's inside this hole in the ground? / Next year's rusty-patched bumble bee queen." End notes include more information about these creatures and the decline of the species, as well as steps readers can take to help conserve bees in their neighborhoods. Danielle J. Ford November/December 2021 p.131(c) Copyright 2021. 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
A poetic life-cycle study of the bumblebee. Honeybees get a lot of attention because of their use in agriculture and their honey, but what about other hardworking pollinators? Here readers will learn about another industrious bee--the rusty-patched bumblebee--from a queen bee's life cycle to the species' role in the food web. The story is told in brief bursts of text, often approaching free verse, on each spread: "Eggs hatch! / Are they bees yet? / No. / Little white grubs, / no eyes, no legs, / eating machines." The backmatter information is more straightforward, providing enough substance for a simple report, and confronts the rusty-patched bumblebee's endangered status. It also includes a short list of resources for further research and 10 suggestions that people of all ages can do to help the struggling bee population. The real queen in this colony is the striking artwork, which appears to be scratchboard with added watercolor. Close-ups of the bees alternate with views of a lush countryside and its other denizens. It's an inviting book on any shelf, and the story is concise enough for longer storytimes. Educators, caregivers, and young readers will all be buzzing with delight. This book is the bee's knees. (Informational picture book. 5-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.