Science writer Kimberly Ridley is an award-winning author of nonfiction books for children. Her joy is sharing her love of nature and writing with children through her books and school visits. Kimberly's picture books, The Secret Pool (Kirkus starred review) and The Secret Bay, have received honors including Riverby Awards from the John Burroughs Association for "outstanding natural history books for young people." Her newest book is THe Secret Stream A former magazine editor, Kimberly has written for publications including The Boston Globe, the Christian Science Monitor, and Downeast Magazine. She holds an MS in Science Journalism.
Science writer Kimberly Ridley is an award-winning author of nonfiction books for children. Her joy is sharing her love of nature and writing with children through her books and school visits. Kimberly's picture books, The Secret Pool (Kirkus starred review) and The Secret Bay, have received honors including Riverby Awards from the John Burroughs Association for "outstanding natural history books for young people." Her newest book is THe Secret Stream A former magazine editor, Kimberly has written for publications including The Boston Globe, the Christian Science Monitor, and Downeast Magazine. She holds an MS in Science Journalism.
As with The Secret Pool and The Secret Bay, Kimberly Ridley shows again why she is a child?s best guide to the natural histories of our planet?s waters.
Science writer Kimberly Ridley is an award-winning author of
nonfiction books for children. Her joy is sharing her love of
nature and writing with children through her books and school
visits. Kimberly’s picture books, The Secret Pool (Kirkus starred
review) and The Secret Bay, have received honors including Riverby
Awards from the John Burroughs Association for “outstanding natural
history books for young people.” Her newest book is THe Secret
Stream A former magazine editor, Kimberly has written for
publications including The Boston Globe, the Christian Science
Monitor, and Downeast Magazine. She holds an MS in Science
Journalism.
Megan Elizabeth Baratta is a children's book illustrator and winner
of the School Library Journal's inaugural 2022 Endies Award for
Best Map. She lives in central New York with her husband, daughter,
and three cats. She loves rendering scenes of ordinary life and
showing their quiet beauty. Her books include Most Days, I Begin
With Spring, and The Secret Stream.
" Follow a headwater stream from its start as a spring in the
forest on its journey to becoming a river, nourishing life all
along its length. The main text, written in the first person from
the point of view of the stream itself, sticks to the top or left
of each spread, introducing major ideas: how insect larvae and
nymphs recycle leaves; kingfishers; beaver dams, etc. Further
information on, for instance, aquatic insect metamorphosis or
otters’ transparent eyelids, is found underneath headings in a
slightly smaller font. As the water flows downstream, children read
about riffles, how aquatic insects must anchor themselves or be
washed down to be a trout’s meal, the importance of trees along the
stream’s banks, and the animals that find food or shelter near the
water. Most but not all animal species are labeled in the
illustrations, which are mostly realistic looking and come to life
with masterful use of shading and sunbeams. The text alternates
between rhyming and not, which can be distracting. Endpages are two
halves of a map showing the course of the stream and the many
sights pointed out in the text. Young naturalists will be
heading to the nearest stream to explore. "
*Kirkus*
"Narrated in intermittent rhymes and using onomatopoeia, this
educational picture book traces a headwater stream from its origins
in the falling rain; its waters burble up from the ground and
tumble over rocks. The illustrations are soothing, with
eye-catching natural features, including flora and insect and
animal life: an otter peeps over a rock, and a brook trout scans
for insects to gobble. The light breaks through the forest canopy
and slices through the stream’s surface, inviting contemplation
over the intricacies of nature."
*Michelle Anne Schingler - Foreword Reviews*
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