Bugs, by Nancy Parker and Joan Wright (Harper Collins, ages 3-8, $6.99, 1987, 40pp, a Reading Rainbow book of 44 titles)
OK, so I broke my rule of not considering books that are old. Especially if they are research tomes, I usually limit them to the past five years. This is not research, however, therefore, I can allow myself to go back further, even to 1987 because Bugs is simply that good!
Many authors attempt to write in rhyme, albeit unsuccessfully. Author Nancy Parker, however, not only succeeds in rhyming but makes the rhymes make sense and flow into each other. She poses a question about an insect, then answers it with both lines rhyming. It must have taken a long long time to come up with such colorful matches! And her descriptions on the facing page have just the right amount of biological information - size, gender, stage of life, and ending with geographic location.
The final page is written more for the adults in the room with a bibliography and taxonomy, preceded by a few pages of a picture glossary for the younger ones.
We generally donate the books post-review, but this one is a keeper! With 16 bugs!









