- The relationship of people to the environment
- The negative impact of humanity on the environment
- A celebration of the environment, its beauty and wonder
- Environment as creation and the metaphysical experience of our world
1. The relationship of people to the environment
This first category includes books that tell of the fine balance between humanity and the environment and the disastrous consequences when we get this balance wrong. In these varied picture books it is not a matter of deliberate action, but rather ignorance and failure to plan effectively, which leads to the destruction of environments whose beauty was once a lure to people.
'All the World' by Liz Garton Scanlon & illustrated by Marla Frazee (Beach Lane Books)
This wonderfully simple picture books for readers aged 3-7 years was a Caldecott Honour book in 2010. Using delightfully simple everyday images of a family interacting with their world and precision language, Scanlon tells a powerful story of how we 'softly' interact with and mark our world. It is a simple, yet profound book. The author sets out to affirm "the importance of all things great and small, from the tiniest shell on the beach, to warm family connections, to the widest sunset sky". She succeeds with the brilliant illustrator Marla Frazee to do just this.
'Can We Save the Tiger?' by Martin Jenkins & illustrated by Vicky White (Walker Books, 2011)
This is a stunning book which was nominated for the Kate Greenaway Medal in 2012. Conservationist Martin Jenkins and Vicky White celebrate some of the world's most endangered species in this book and show us why we must try to save them. Martin is a conservation biologist and consultant for the UN conservation organisation WCMC. Vicky White had experience as a zookeeper at the Cheshire Zoo caring for great apes. This is Vicky's second book; her first was 'Ape'.
The book has stunning images and a punchy text that confronts the reader. It begins with the matter of fact reminder that some of the animals and plants we have shared the planet with "...have coped with the changes very well. But some haven't. In fact, some have coped so badly that they're not here any more. They're extinct". Jenkins then introduces us to five species that are extinct, the Dodo, Steller's Sea Cow, the Tasmanian Tiger (Marsupial Wolf), Great Auk and Broad-faced Potoroo, before another challenge, "and then there are all those species that are still around, but only just." Like the tiger!
This is without a doubt one of the best conservation picture books that I've seen. White's illustrations are fine-grained pencil sketches, some in colour and some simply black and white, and are wonderful. They invite you to gaze and browse for the pictures alone. Children aged 5 to 12 will love the book.
'Window', by Jeannie Baker
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'Flute’s Journey: The Life of a Wood Thrush', by Lynne Cherry
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'The World that Jack Built', by Ruth Brown
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'Kenju's Forest', by Junko Morimoto
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'The Earth and I' by Frank Asch
This is an ideal book for young preschool readers. It tells the story of the friendship between a child and the earth. They play together, listen to each other, and nourish each other. When the earth is sad, the child is sad. The child sets out to find a way to make his 'friend' happy. This is a beautifully illustrated book which shows in word and image a tender and special relationship between a child and their world.
2. The negative impact of humanity on the environment
Stories in this category reflect man's careless destruction of the environment motivated by greed and ignorance. These are stories that tell of humanity's failure to see environmental damage and act to prevent it. They also tend to have a much stronger ideological message.
'One Plastic Bag: Isatou Ceesay and the Recycling Women of the Gambia', by Miranda Paul & illustrated by Elizabeth Zunon (Milbrook Press)
Plastic bags are cheap and an easy way to package and carry things. But when they are discarded they quickly multiply in any environment. They pile high, become mixed in garbage of all kinds, become breeding grounds for mosquitoes and other insects and vermin. Soon we have an environmental disaster. This beautifully illustrated book tells the story of how one woman Isatou Ceesay began to recycle the bags in Gambia and in the process encouraged others to join her. The outcome is an environmental success worth sharing. A wonderful environmental picture book for children aged 5-9 years.
'Where the Forest Meets the Sea', by Jeannie Baker
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'The Sign of the Seahorse: A tale of Greed and High Adventure', by Graeme Base
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'The Lorax', by Dr Seuss
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'Lester and Clyde', James H. Reece
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3. A celebration of the environment, its beauty and wonder
Books in this category celebrate the world's biodiversity and beauty without pointing to problems or making strong comments about human action. These are books where often the environment is secondary to the story, but where everything about the book reinforces the value, beauty and wonder of our world.
'The Elephant Scientist' by Caitlin O'Connell & Donna M. Jackson (Houghton Mifflin)
This multi award winning book tells how the author
became interested in science and set her on a quest to protect
threatened species. Years later camouflaged
and peering through binoculars, Caitlin O'Connell an American
scientist traveled to Namibia to study African elephants in their
natural habitat. She couldn't believe what she was seeing.
As the mighty matriarch scanned the horizon, the other elephants followed suit, stopping midstride and standing as still as statues. The observation would be one of many to guide O'Connell to a groundbreaking discovery!
"Children will be interested in O'Connell's growing interest in science, how family and teachers encouraged her, and her efforts to protect these threatened animals. This amazing presentation is a must-have for all collections." -- School Library Journal
As the mighty matriarch scanned the horizon, the other elephants followed suit, stopping midstride and standing as still as statues. The observation would be one of many to guide O'Connell to a groundbreaking discovery!
"Children will be interested in O'Connell's growing interest in science, how family and teachers encouraged her, and her efforts to protect these threatened animals. This amazing presentation is a must-have for all collections." -- School Library Journal
'Aranea: A Story About a Spider', by Jenny Wagner & Ron Brooks (Illustrator)
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'Wind in the Willows', Kenneth Grahame
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'The Little Island', Golden McDonald and Leonard Weisgard
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'S is for Save the Planet: A How to be Green Alphabet', by Brad Herzog and Linda Holt Ayriss (Illustrator)
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4. Environment as creation and the metaphysical experience of our world
There are a number of children's books that simply celebrate the world as creation. Some of these books simply focus on the beauty of nature, while others offer creation accounts, myths and metaphysical explanations of the world and humanity's connection to it.
'The Waterhole' by Graeme Base
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'Enora and the Black Crane', Arone Raymond Meeks
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'The Rainbow Serpent', by Dick Roughsey
This is another Australian Aboriginal legend that tells the Dreamtime story of a time when there were only people and how Goorialla, the great Rainbow Serpent travels across the country with a dramatic transformation of the land and the resulting creation of animal life.
'The Fisherman and the Theefyspray', Paul Jennings & Jane Tanner (Illustrator)
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The Whales' Song, Dyan Sheldon (Author) & Gary Blythe (Illustrator)
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