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Close to You: How Animals Bond

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Parents and their young have unique ways of bonding, especially in the animal kingdom. A baby kangaroo nestles in its mother's pouch, while a mama alligator carries her baby gently in her mouth. Polar bears cuddle, and penguin parents take turns warming their chicks in the Antarctic winter. Just like people, animals kiss, rub noses, and snuggle. Through endearing pictures and a lyrical text, Kimiko Kajikawa explores the parent-child bonds of animals large and small.

32 pages, Hardcover

First published March 18, 2008

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14 people want to read

About the author

Kimiko Kajikawa

5 books10 followers
Kimiko's true love of reading and writing began one day at her local library. Kimiko says, "My local librarian asked me if I had ever read Harriet the Spy. She said that it was a great book, and I immediately took it home. I read the entire book that day! I was so disappointed when it ended that I reread it immediately. I had to find a way to keep the spirit of Harriet the Spy alive with me, so I began to keep a journal. And spy on people. I did not follow anyone, but I would try to pick up what people were saying, and I would study their mannerisms. I think Harriet the Spy was the book that got me to write because I really started to look at the world and put down what I saw on paper."

By fifth grade, Kimiko won an essay contest sponsored by the Philadelphia Inquirer. Her essay was about Abraham Lincoln and her victory earned her $3. At that moment, Kimiko concluded that, "Writing was a great way to make a living."

Kimiko won another writing contest when she was twelve, and this time she got to spend a day at the Bucks County Courier Times writing her own column. "I loved it. They took me around and introduced me to all the people that put the newspaper together. I felt like somebody special until they ran my photo in the paper. I was horrified that everyone at school would see it. I looked so nerdy!"

In high school, Kimiko was published in Seventeen Magazine. She was also the assistant editor and columnist for her high school newspaper. "At that point," Kimiko says, "I told my parents that I wanted to become a writer. My parents were unhappy with my decision. They told me that I should become a businesswoman instead."

Kimiko's mom is Japanese and her dad is American. Her parents met after World War II. They didn't even speak the same language when they were married.

Her mom was born in Tokyo in 1929. In an essay that Kimiko wrote when she was in eighth grade, she said, "There are no pictures of my mother when she was a child because they were all burned during the war. My mother was eleven years old when World War II started. During the war, she sometimes only had toothpaste to eat. And she would often see burned bodies on the side of the road. All the bodies were black, she would say, except for the teeth."

During the war, Kimiko's mother lost nine relatives in one day during the bombing of Hiroshima. Soon after the war, Kimiko's grandmother died of cancer. The very next day, her aunt fell from a train and died from head injuries. Kimiko says, "My mom's life is filled with tragic stories that she rarely tells."

"In fact, my family has been the inspiration for most of my books. I credit my son, Chris, for starting my career as an author. When he was little, he fell in love with trains. What Chris wanted most in the world was a book with photographs of steam trains for young children. Fortunately, for me, that book didn't exist. After two years of searching, I decided to write and photograph the book that Chris so desperately wanted to read."

According to Kimiko, "Working on my books has helped me make sense of my life and helped me deal with the pain of growing up Eurasian. There were children in my neighborhood who wouldn't play with me when I was a kid. Some of them threw rocks at me and called me, "slanty eyes." Having grown up wishing I looked like most everyone else, I understand how important it is to give children an awareness and appreciation of our external differences and a realization that, underneath it all, we are very much the same. I feel that through teaching children to respect others we give them something even more important: self-respect."

"For several years, I have truly enjoyed reading old Japanese folklore and adapting those stories for an American audience. This is very therapeutic work for me. When I was little, I would go to sleep and wish that I would wake up looking like all the other kids. Now, I take pride in my heritage. Writing books has helped me grow as a person. I

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Maddi Holmes.
83 reviews
November 21, 2017
I would recommend it for both early primary grades, kindergarten through first grade, as well as middle grades, fourth through sixth grade. I would categorize it as informational nonfiction.

This is a great nonfiction book for lower and upper elementary grades. There are many different animals in the book, and it explains how they show affection to their parents. It’s a great way to introduce new animals to students are unfamiliar with them. Upper elementary students could also use the detailed factual information in the back of the book to work on finding the main idea. I love reading children’s books, and would incorporate them in both lower and upper elementary rooms. I feel like sometimes teachers forget that you can use children's books in upper elementary classrooms as well.
Profile Image for Ashlee Reed.
76 reviews1 follower
November 21, 2017
Age: Lower Elementary (K-3rd)
Genre: Informational

I really enjoyed this book. The realistic pictures help students understand that this is a true story and part of non fiction. At the end of the story there is a list about each animal and more about their bonding. As Dr. Fish said in Children's Lit, you could read this book and have upper elementary students read the back and find the main idea, which is a standard.
I think kids will enjoy reading this book and be able to see that it's not just humans that hug and kiss to show you love them, but animals can show love too!
Profile Image for Jonathan.
55 reviews
October 17, 2012
A simple to read book about animals and how they bond. It features beautiful photos of the different animals and their young that are very eye catching. This book is excellent for units on animals for not only preschool but features more detailed info that the child can learn about as they develop their reading skills.

LEARNING EXPERIENCE: Children can bring in a picture of their parents or loved ones and create a collage of how they show their love. (This could be done with newspaper/magazine clippings; ideally for pre-k to 1st grade).
Profile Image for Erin.
96 reviews6 followers
November 12, 2012
Book can be read with children of multiple ages. Explains how animals bond--a good segue into talking about that and how people bond. At the end is a longer explanation of the bonding rituals of the animals in the books. Discusstion starter, rhymes, vocabulary, and a healthy dose of sweetness.
Profile Image for Marianne.
107 reviews9 followers
August 15, 2008
Sweet non-fiction book for a young child about the love between and mother and child. Information at the end of this picture book about the different types of animals talked about.
274 reviews2 followers
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March 18, 2013
This is a GREAT storytime book for toddlers. Bright photographs of baby animals and their mom/dads, short rhyming lines of how animals show affection.
Profile Image for Zonia.
425 reviews
April 13, 2009
Good nonfiction read aloud for Valentine's Day.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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