An immense world How animals sense earth's amazing secrets

Ed Yong

Book - 2025

"The New York Times bestseller now available with beautiful full-color illustrations for young readers! Explore the amazing ways animals see, hear, and feel the world, with Pulitzer Prize winner Ed Yong. Did you know that there are turtles who can track the Earth's magnetic fields? That some fish use electricity to talk to each other? Or that giant squids evolved their enormous eyeballs to look out for whales? The world is so much BIGGER and more "immense" than we humans experience it. We can only see so many colors, we can only feel so many sensations, and there are some senses we can't access at all. Exploring the amazing ways animals perceive the world is an excellent way to help understand the world itself. And ...this young readers adaptation of the mega-bestseller AN IMMENSE WORLD is perfect for curious kids and their families. Sure to capture young readers' interest it is filled amazing animal facts and stunning full-color illustrations. Along the way are tons of amazing animal facts: Did you know that leopard pee smells like popcorn? That there is a special kind of shrimp whose punches are faster than a bullet? That it's important to take your dog for dedicated "smell walks?" Want to know the real reason zebras have stripes? (hint: it's not for camouflage)? Pick up this enthralling and enormously entertaining book to find out! A Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection"--

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Bright Matter Books [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Ed Yong (author)
Other Authors
AnnMarie Anderson (author), Rebecca Mills (illustrator)
Edition
First edition, Young readers edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
pages cm
Audience
Ages 9-12
Grades 4-6
ISBN
9780593810880
9780593810897
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Pulitzer Prize--winning science journalist Yong brings his acclaimed best-seller to young readers. With a focus on sensory biology, the vibrantly illustrated narrative opens with the zoology concept of umwelt, the "sensory bubble" or surroundings an animal can sense or experience. In the author's adept, conversational style, the topic becomes accessible and enjoyable. Relating his own interactions with the work of scientists and researchers from around the world, Yong not only explains how animal senses work but also how their senses are tied to their survival needs. The breadth of animals and their anatomy and abilities--from bees that view the nectar centers of flowers through ultraviolet light patterns to catfish with taste buds spread all over their scale-free skin--is impressive. Yong also expands the notion of senses to consider how animals perceive pain, temperature, contact and flow, surface vibrations, echoes, and electric and magnetic fields. The chapter on pain is particularly notable for its attention to ethics in pain research. Brief, intermittent field studies from Yong's own travels, such as studying how a manatee's whiskers help it sense the flow of water around it, add more details to each section. Concluding chapters on how senses work together and how human interaction threatens animals' sensory abilities further encourage readers to think about senses and animals in new ways.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A fascinating and accessible exploration of how animals experience the world, adapted for young readers from his bestselling adult original by Pulitzer Prize--winning author Yong. Even when creatures share the same sense, such as sight or sound, the Umwelt, or "sensory bubble," they live in may be very different. For instance, where a human hears only silence, another creature may detect sound. Some creatures can see colors in what appears to others to be darkness. Readers may decide that the broad range ofhow animals sense the same inputs is just as intriguing as thewhy. Through exploring a variety of types of senses--smell, taste, vision, color, pain, heat, touch, vibration, hearing, echolocation, and electric and magnetic field detection--this book does a bang-up job of giving readers a front-row seat to animal experiences. Well-defined vocabulary appears in "words to remember" sections at the end of chapters, and insights from experts are incorporated throughout. Mills' gorgeous illustrations, both color and black-and-white, are original to this edition and enhance the appeal and accessibility of the content. Yong reminds readers that reducing sensory pollution by protecting animals' natural sensory environments--darkness and quiet, especially--is crucial to their well-being and that learning more about animals will help us behave more empathetically. An insightful and informative look at the animal kingdom with high appeal for lovers of nature and science. (author's note, photo credits, index)(Nonfiction. 10-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.