Bold, bright, and brimming with facts, this hilariously droll introduction to the prehistoric world will enthrall new dinosaur fans and ignite their curiosity.
Did you know that Giganotosaurus had a tongue big enough to be your bed? That plant eaters evolved at different heights to assure there would be more than enough food for all--with each nibbling at a different point on the tree? Thirty exuberant poems, divided into four fact-packed sections, put readers up close and personal with species from T. rex and Triceratops to Stegosaurus and Velociraptor. Some have lines of terrible teeth, while others sport feathery peacock tails. All thunder off the page in vibrant illustrations pitched to poems that ring with humor and heart, while relaying well-researched facts about dinosaur anatomy, diet, herd behavior, and more. Young devotees will demand to read this energetic tribute to the dinosaurs, in all their larger-than-life glory, over and over again. Back matter includes a time line and information about the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods.
Simon Mole is an acclaimed children’s poet (and sleep deprived dad) who has shared stages with Michael Rosen, Kae Tempest and John Hegley. His first picture book Kites was published in 2019, followed by I Love My Bike in 2021, and I Love My Cat in 2022.
Simon is a National Poetry Day Ambassador, with over ten years’ experience using rap and poetry in community and education settings, including projects with Great Ormond Street Hospital and Arsenal Football Club.
Nederlandse vertaling gelezen: Welkom in de wereld van de dinosauriërs. Boek met prachtige plaatjes. Bij elke dino in het boek staat de fonetische naam en allemaal leuke (echte) feitjes. Mooi, leerzaam en ook nog op rijm!
If we're being completely honest, whilst there may be more than one way to skin a dinosaur, I'm not sure there are that many unique ways to create a First Book of them. This has been done before. Has it been done better? Yeah, probably. Does it matter? I guess it depends if you like this one more.
There isn't anything particularly stand out about this collection of dinosaurs, any more than any of its predecessors, but I happen to like this one a little more - the size of the book is generous, the illustrations are huge and the narrative isn't too info-dumpy, so this one works for me.
If I could improve upon it, I'd choose glossy pictures rather than matt drawings. But you can't win them all.
ARC provided from the publishers in exchange for an honest review.
Richie’s Picks: STOMP AND CHOMP: MY FIRST BOOK OF DINOSAURS by Simon Mole and Matt Hunt, ill,, Candlewick, October 2023, 80p., ISBN: 978-1-5362-324-3
“You know tyrannosaurus rex was destroyed before By a furry little ball that crawled along The primeval jungle floor He stole the eggs of the dinosaur Close your eyes & create the sound Open your hands & rebuild the ground We are egg snatchers! (egg snatchers!)” – Paul Kantner (1970)
“Natural history artist Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins unveiled his dinosaur sculptures in 1854. These were the world’s first full-scale reconstructions of dinosaurs and represent the first three species discovered. Dinosaurs were still a relatively new discovery in the mid-1800s.” – from the (British) Natural History Museum website
“PARASAUROLOPHUS ECHOES (PAIR-uh-saw-RAWL-uh-fus)
When a Parasaurolophus blows air through the tubes and passageways in its crest, when its breath whooshes up the little tunnels inside, it lets out a long…low…bellowing…cry,
Scientifically shown to be a similar sound to a cow playing a trumpet in a cave, Or a goose troupe tooting kazoos. Or one very grizzly goat with a didgeridoo.
And, OK, that got a little silly, but imagine hundreds and hundreds in a herd: each calling to another, back and forth. A constant chorus. Deep. Majestic.
Echoing for miles and miles, Echoing through the forest. Echoing up past the treetops and out into the sky.”
Since the days of Waterhouse Hawkins, little kids (and not-so-little kids) have been transfixed by the enormity and exoticness of dinosaurs. During the 1961-62 school year, this old dinosaur visited the American Museum of Natural History, and experienced the life-size models there for the first time. There were few subsequent school field trips that came close to measuring up to the awesomeness of that experience.
Dinosaur books are an easy sell and STOMP AND CHOMP, with its colorful, oversized, mixed-media depictions of dozens of dinosaur species, will be no exception. It makes a lot of sense for the publisher to be promoting it for the preschool and kindergarten crowd (ages 2 through 5).
But so much of this book will be wasted on the rugrats. This, to me, is an excellent picture book for older readers. It will be the upper elementary students, who already have experience with dinosaur books, classroom lessons, and possibly field trips, who will glory in this one. While the little ones “ooh!” and “ah!” over the pictures, it will be the bigger kids who will be impressed by all the new species that have been discovered in recent decades. They will try decoding the Latin syllabification, and reading aloud the descriptive and fun poems. (Some teachers will be smart enough to have students each memorize one of the poems.) The backmatter is minimal, but I searched a sampling of the facts cited, and they all appeared accurate and up-to-date.
The bottom line: STOMP AND CHOMP is a seriously tasty addition to kids dinosaur lit. Pair it with Brian Selznick’s Caldecott Honor book on Waterhouse Hawkins.
“THERIZINOSAURUS: A RECIPE (THAIR-uh-ZEEN-uh-SAUR-us)
Carefully remove one evil sea serpent from a fairy tale or myth, then whack it on the body of an oversize potbellied ostrich.
Grab a fancy feathery peacock tail and heat it in the shape-shifter until it quadruples in size. Add it to the mix. Leave to settle.
Now here’s the final touch! Six swords, roughly the length of your arm. Sprinkle three on each side, and stand well back.
STOMP AND CHOMP: MY FIRST BOOK OF DINOSAURS complies a lot of information in a way that's easy for children to understand with lyrical writing. It's broken up into four sections: Meet the Dinosaurs, Eat or Be Eaten, Dinosaur Families, and The End or Is It. There's an introduction so the readers can understand what to expect to get out of this book. In the Meet the Dinosaur section, we get a basic profile of common dinosaurs written in a fun and engaging way. In the Eat or Be Eaten section, we learn what a lot of the dinosaurs eat and the different types of eaters. I like how the More Than Enough page is vertical and shows a scale of a large tree in comparison to three dinosaurs while explaining how they utilize every part of the tree. In Dinosaur Families, we learn how they group together and in The End or Is It, the reader learns about fossils.
The illustrations are bold and vibrant with simplistic details. In the back of the book, there's a dinosaur timeline that goes into a little of each of the different time periods. This book is packed with so much information that it'll keep dinosaur lovers occupied for a while. I love how some parts read like a fact book and others are like a poem. The different styles of writing and formatting of the illustrations keeps readers on their toes.
Final Verdict: I would recommend this to young children who love dinosaurs and who want to know more. It's a great addition to a child's growing library of dinosaur books and it's a perfect first dinosaur book.
Ken je een dinofan? Dan is dit het moment om even te stoppen met scrollen en dit bericht te lezen! Er zijn al heel wat boeken over en met dino's verschenen, maar dit is echt een prachtexemplaar. Een groot en stevig boek, met een kleurrijke uitstraling dat erom roept om open geslagen te worden. Het heet je op deze manier welkom in de wereld van de dinosauriërs. Diverse soorten zijn mooi in beeld gebracht en in korte, duidelijke teksten op rijm leer en ontdek je meer over desbetreffende dino. Waar ik persoonlijk erg enthousiast over ben is dat het kinderen van diverse leeftijden aan zal spreken. Het jonge kind, dat houdt van grote platen waarop veel te zien is en waarbij de teksten kunnen worden voorgelezen. Tot het kind dat leert lezen en de teksten zelf kan lezen en het oudere kind dat er lekker door kan bladeren en wellicht meer uit de teksten haalt of zelf op onderzoek gaat naar meer informatie. Al met al een prachtig boek!
A First Book of Dinosaurs by Simon Mole is a large, slightly heavy, hardback book filled to the brim with colourful dinosaurs.
The book is split into sections: -Meet the Dinosaurs -Eat or be Eaten -Dinosaur Families -The End. Or is it?
All of the information is written in a rhyming style, and whilst there is some factual information in there don't expect the usual fact section that tells you everything from location, to timeline, what they ate, etc. This is more of a fun dinosaur book than an educational one.
The illustrations are large and fill most of the pages and they are matte too. The text though is written in black throughout but sometimes it was hard to see when the background was for say dark green.
Overall, if you are looking for a fun dinosaur book to go along with a factual one then this would work.
All the things you wanted to know about dinosaurs big and small, in small manageable poetic chunks. Learn about the meat-eaters and the plant-eaters and everything in-between.
This is a fun introduction to the world of dinosaurs. Each page offers a pronunciation guide so your budding paleontologist can correctly tell everyone what their favorite dinosaur is. The book covers over 30+ dinosaurs in a variety of poetic formats, so this could work in a science class or in an ELA class too.
This is a little different to most dinosaur books on the market, and all the better for it! 'A first book of Dinosaurs' by Simon Mole is gorgeous, brightly illustrated hardback containing a plethera of fun poems about all the favourites, as well as some you might not have heard of (and even one about poo - always popular!) plus more FACTS than you can shake a fossil at. A perfect gift for the mini-palaeontologist in your life - prepare to read it again and again!
Classified as a poetry book in my library, most of the poems were a little eh. The illustrations were okay. The information provided was okay. I suppose as a first book of dinosaurs it might be okay, but I wasn't wowed by it and it would be a book I would immediately recommend.