Book Descriptions
for Time for a Bath by Steve Jenkins and Robin Page
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Three easy, accessible books about animals’ habits and behavior are full of fascinating facts. Time to Sleep looks at how a variety of creatures catch some zzz’ s. Time to Eat focuses on food and eating. Time for a Bath is about getting clean ... and getting dirty, too (it’s how some creatures cool off). Collaborators Steve Jenkins and Robin Page bring their trademark approach that blends dynamic visuals, via Jenkins’s vivid, detailed collage images, with a witty, informative narrative. A new creature is introduced on each page or double-page of each volume, with a catchy phrase and a sentence or two describing the trait that relates to the book’s theme: “A slimy sleeping bag” describes the parrotfish, which produces a mucus cocoon that masks its scent from predators while it sleeps. “Get the point?” captions the warthog, which wriggles backward into a cave or crevice to sleep, with its sharp tusk facing outward. It’s all fascinating, and in one case, really gross. (Intrigued?) A visual index at the end of each book provides more detailed information about each of the creatures profiled in three volumes that are small in size but huge in appeal. (Ages 4–9)
CCBC Choices 2012. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2012. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
Playfully addresses some of the most bizarre and ironic ways wild animals can bathe.The gecko doesn't have eyelids, so in order to keep its eyeballs dirt-free the lizard licks them with its tongue. Some ants keep clean by scrubbing each other with feet that have been dipped in their oily saliva!
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.