Years after a great oak tree tumbled to the ground, a whole community of animals made it their home. Roly-polies and daddy longlegs prowled here and there, while chipmunks and salamanders dashed everywhere. Is the old tree alive? Or is it now dead? This lighthearted book offers a marvelous insight into a unique and easily-accessible community of forest animals. Jennifer DiRubbio's vivid close-up illustrations bring these fascinating creatures to life. Parents and the author offers over a dozen activities, projects, and lots of cool ideas ranging from suggestions for an animal diary, readers theatre, finger play, and much more that will help make learning fun.Book PaperbackPublication 3/1/2011 32Reading Age 4 and Up
This book had great potential to be both eye-catching and educational. . . and then it started to rhyme. The rhyming became nauseating and then I couldn't go on. If only it had just simply told the story of how a very old oak fell and became a home too all the animals around it, it would have been engaging and enlightening. I love the cover with the little girl looking over the log's edge at a snake. Too bad it didn't follow through. Also, the pages are just too shiny!!! I know, who cares, but I had just finished a very classy book with mat finished pages and this one just fell short.
This is a fascinating story about the life that goes on in and around an oak tree that lies rotting on the ground. That description might not appeal to some readers, but it really is very interesting to see nature doing what nature does, and so beautifully illustrated.
This book explains what happens to a rotting log in the woods. There are many bugs and creatures that inhabit an old log. Some of these include ants, worms, salamanders, snakes, and even chipmunks. The last sentence of the book is "Is this log alive? Or is it now dead?" This gives the class a bit of discussion.
I liked this book. What I liked most about it was the field notes in the back which went into more detail about the creatures in the book. It also had activities and projects in the back.
I would use this book in my classroom to discuss the cycle of matter in an ecosystem.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Really liked the contemplative question that ended the book. My kids love creepy crawly things and so really enjoyed this book. While I found the repetitive very a little boring, they got into it and when I left a gap for them to finish one of the rhyming lines they were able to figure it out. A fun little read.
This is a nice read to remember you of how things become new again, how change is good. This is an example of how something in nature dies and becomes new. A tree dies, then becomes a rotting log. But if you left it be, it can kinda become alive again. You decide!