How to find a fox

Kate Gardner

Book - 2021

"Taking kids on an imaginary trek through different landscapes and seasons, How to Find a Fox celebrates one of our planet's most graceful and enchanting creatures: the red fox. Ossi Saarinen's stunning wildlife photos and Kate Gardner's lively and informative words capture the magical and profound connection between animals and humans. Readers will be inspired to get outside and make their own discoveries--maybe with a camera in-hand, just like Ossi"--

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Subjects
Genres
Instructional and educational works
Picture books
Published
Philadelphia : RP Kids 2021.
Language
English
Main Author
Kate Gardner (author)
Other Authors
Ossi Saarinen (photographer)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780762471355
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This riveting picture book introduces foxes through encouraging words and exceptional color photos. The dual text offers short phrases and sentences, printed in large type and extending over several double-page spreads. "If you want to find a fox, you can look in the forest" begins the conversational main text, which works equally well for reading the book aloud with a young child or a group of children. For kids who want to know more, occasional paragraphs present information relevant to topics such as where foxes might be found, what they eat, how they deal with heat in summer and cold in winter, what sounds they make, and how to recognize their tracks. The closing words, which encourage kids to wait "patient, quiet, and still" for a glimpse of a fox, relates directly to the illustrator's note on the facing page, where he describes learning to photograph wildlife near his home in Finland. Beautifully composed and lit, Saarinen's photos invite comparison with the work of the best nature photographers in children's books, such as Nic Bishop and Suzi Eszterhas. The many appealing close-ups of adult foxes and pups are balanced with beautiful landscape shots of the animals' varied habitats. A captivating book for animal lovers.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This collection of images by Finnish wildlife photographer Saarinen offers enthralling looks at young foxes photographed so that their golden eyes, smooth black paws, and bushy tails seem near enough to reach out and touch. To accompany them, Gardner (Lovely Beasts) provides instructions for fox-finding, revealing when the animals are active ("You can look in the spring,/ or the summer,// or the autumn...// or even the winter"), and teasing readers by telling them where foxes won't be found: "DON'T look in the sky," she writes, where readers see three flying birds, "or the trees," where readers see a squirrel. Simple phrases appear in larger type in the upper parts of spreads, while blocks of smaller text below supply more detail ("Foxes don't hibernate; they spend the whole year out and about"). The figures are shown in poses that accentuate their grace and curiosity; they're not seen chasing prey or eating. Larger photographs of forest and lake scenes offer calm, and pictures of other wildlife creatures round out this introduction to foxes--and, more broadly, to wildlife and scenery of a part of the natural world. Ages 4--8. Author's agent: Kirsten Hall, Catbird Productions. Photographer's agent: Elizabeth Bewley, Sterling Lord Literistic. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Gardner's text will tell readers about red foxes and how to find them, but Saarinen's photos are the draw that will get them into the woods practicing their stillness and observation skills. Brief text on each page, with the occasional paragraph of further information in a smaller font, presents readers with just the basics. Readers can look in the forest, the meadow, or the city and possibly spot a fox. Up-close photos of adorable foxes in each locale fill the pages. Similarly, children can look in the morning or afternoon, but dawn and dusk are best. Foxes don't hibernate, so they can be spied through all four seasons. Gardner tells readers not to look in the sky, in trees, or in rivers or ponds, and don't bother looking in the rain when foxes use other animals' abandoned dens for shelter. She highlights foxes' "fast feet, / amber eyes, / and…soft tail tipped in white" and describes what fox tracks look like (in contrast to two others, unidentified) and the sounds foxes make. The last hints are the most helpful for hopeful fox-spotters: "You must be as still as a pebble… / and as quiet as the moon. / You must be willing to wait…and wait." Saarinen's photos are phenomenal; amateur photographers will drool in envy and perhaps learn a few tips in his photographer's note. A beautiful book that will draw readers out into nature and put their patience to the test. (Informational picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.