Synopses & Reviews
You see them feeding along the sides of roads or flying to the tops of trees. They are known as common crows, but there is nothing common about them. The familiar sound of "caw, caw, caw" is just one of at least twenty-five distinct sounds crows make in order to communicate with one another. Laurence Pringle examines these remarkable creatures in a fact-filled text that explores how crows talk, behave, and survive. With beautifully detailed illustration by Bob Marstall, young readers get a fascinating look into the world of one of the smartest birds on earth in this winner of the John Burroughs Nature Books for Young Readers Award.
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"Laurence Pringle is one of the best wildlife authors currently writing for the children's market, and this latest offering on the lowly crow will only add to his reputation."--Library Media Connection, starred review
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"...will rivet young naturalists."--Kirkus Reviews
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"The text is vividly written and easy to understand, and the detailed color illustrations are striking."--School Library Journal
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"Pringle inspires readers to want to know more. His closing point, that crows should not be categorized as helpful or harmful (they can be both), but 'simply part of nature,' is a thought worth provoking. (afterword)" --Kirkus Reviews
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"Great for group sharing and for a lively read-aloud." --Booklist
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* "Laurence Pringle is one of the best wildlife authors currently writing for the children's market. . . . Every elementary school media center will want to have a copy of this great book on their shelves." --Library Media Connection, starred review
About the Author
Laurence Pringle has written 108 books for young readers, many of them award-winning science titles. He is the recipient of three major awards for his body of work-the Eva L. Gordon Award for Children's Science Literature, the Washington Post-Children's Book Guild Nonfiction Award, and a Lifetime Achievement Prize from the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He lives in West Nyack, New York-a few miles from Rockland Lake, once "the ice box of New York City."Bob Marstall is an award-winning illustrator of nature-oriented nonfiction books for children. He lives in Northampton, Massachusetts.