One of the challenges of the Orono Public Library summer reading challenge (not to be confused with the readathon) is to check out a book with a flower on its cover. Easy peasy, right?...
...Wrong. I looked through the new YA, juvenile, and even picture book fiction and found none. I got desperate enough to scan adult fiction. Zip. Zilch. Nada. Then I tried juvenile nonfiction and found Buzz: A Guide to Bugs and Bees 🐝 and How to Spot Them written by Richard "Bugman" Jones and illustrated by Sara Boccaccini Meadows.
I saw immediately that it was much more than a list check off. It's the perfect book to read this time of year when insects are most abundant. We admire the beauty and grace of some--say butterflies and dragonflies. We feel less affectionate towards mosquitoes and those creatures who devour our carefully nurtured gardens. We pretty much ignore the rest.
Jones, an insect enthusiast since childhood, wants us to be more aware of how complex and amazing and diverse our six legged fellow Earth inhabitants are. Readers can find the answers to many questions:
*How (and why) do fireflies create light?
*How do butterflies evolve from drab cocoon to beautiful and graceful winged creatures?
and *what are some of the weird things insects sometimes dine on?
Text is nicely complimented by vivid and sometimes gorgeous illustrations. Buzz is a wonderful read that can be so much more. Observing these fascinating invertebrates can be a great outdoor activity for curious kids and families.
This I know from experience. As a child I spent many enchanted hours studying, observing, and collecting insects. In fact when Mom took Harriet and me to Mexico she got me a permit to bring insect specimens into America. You should have seen the look on the customs man's face when a 10-year-old produced this government document!
On a purrrsonal note, I had run out of library books and was dipping into my personal emergency stash. So when I stopped at the Orono Public Library on my way to the gardens I picked out seven YA novels, sure I had no inter library loans waiting for me. WRONG! There were six. So now I have thirteen books to read and review in three weeks. Guess I better step up my reading game.
Monday evening meteorologists had predicted extreme weather storms with hail spawning tornadoes for Tuesday night. You'd better believe it scared me. Hail could destroy my flowers. But we didn't get a thing except maybe light rain. Thank goodness!
A great big shout out goes out to the people who deliver ILLs from library to library.
Jules Hathaway
Sent from my Galaxy



