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On Earth  Cover Image Book Book

On Earth / written and illustrated by G. Brian Karas.

Karas, G. Brian. (Author).

Summary:

We are all passengers of the Earth as it spins, tilts and circles the sun. Learn about Earth's cycles of rotation and revolution, plus how they affect our lives through the days and seasons.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780142410639 (pbk)
  • ISBN: 9780399240256 (reinforced) :
  • ISBN: 039924025X (reinforced) :
  • Physical Description: 1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations ; 30 cm.
  • Publisher: New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons, c2005.

Content descriptions

Study Program Information Note:
Accelerated Reader/Renaissance Learning LG 3.0 0.5
Awards Note:
A Junior Library Guild selection.
Subject: Seasons > Juvenile literature.
Earth > Juvenile literature.
Earth > Rotation > Juvenile literature.

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Westcoast Early Learning Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Westcoast Early Learning Library EARTH (Text) 35200000727599 Children's Nonfiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2005 May #1
    K-Gr. 3. With the same large format and broad perspective used in his picture book Atlantic (2002), Karas now discusses the orbit, rotation, and tilt of planet Earth. The concepts here are complex, but some children will get the gist of what a year represents, why we have seasons, and what makes day light and night dark. The book begins, "On earth / we go for a giant ride in space, spinning like a merry-go-round," and arrows are used to indicate the spinning of Earth as well as its circuit around the sun. Double-page spreads present the passage of a year and the changing seasons from an astronomical perspective and from a child-size point of view. Many of the individual illustrations are quite striking and even beautiful, and Karas' child-friendly artwork loses none of its charm when seen in this large scale. Indeed, it seems even more original and appealing. In the end, though, the book remains a series of loosely connected, illustrated concepts, rather than a coherent whole. Still, this ambitious nonfiction picture book might be a good place to start small children thinking big. ((Reviewed May 1, 2005)) Copyright 2005 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2005 Fall
    Tackling a grand science concept for young readers, Karas covers the earth's rotation and revolution, space and time, hemispheres, and gravity. The spare text alternates between technical descriptions and personal experiences. Artistic renderings of the earth and its cycles introduce diagrams and offer concrete images showing what happens as day turns into night, seasons change, and the earth rotates on its axis. Copyright 2005 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
  • Horn Book Magazine Reviews : Horn Book Magazine Reviews 2005 #5
    As he did in his poetic introduction to the ocean (Atlantic), Karas tackles another grand science concept for young readers. Here he covers the earth's rotation and revolution, space and time, hemispheres, and gravity. The spare text alternates between technical descriptions ("The earth spins on its axis and circles the sun in a great sweep") and personal experiences ("We face the sun, its light and warmth, as we live our days"), allowing readers to examine both general scientific principles and their specific manifestations. Karas's artistic renderings of the earth and its cycles introduce youngsters to diagrams, a crucial piece of the language of science, and offer concrete images that show what happens as day turns into night, the seasons change, and the earth rotates on its axis. A diagonal line bisecting the earth in many illustrations reinforces axis, an important vocabulary word that is further detailed in an illustrated glossary. Similarly, gravity receives its own visual definition (as well as a glossary entry) as a youngster stands on ground that appears vertical on the page. Read this one aloud, but allow children plenty of time to pore over the illustrations on their own. Copyright 2005 Horn Book Magazine Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2005 May #2
    Really quite glorious in his simplicity, Karas in word and picture effortlessly imparts understanding of time, calendars, seasons and growth in the rotation and revolution of planet earth. Arrows show the earth spinning on its axis and the way it "circles the sun in a great sweep." Children face the sun and watch the shadows show the length of a day. Then on a wonderful orb, a child in bed faces the stars on the periwinkle night half, and another one, fishing on a riverbank, faces a blue, rainbowed sky on the blue-green-and-gold half that is day. The planet spinning and orbiting around the sun follows the months, "so by the time we get back to where we started, we're one year older." The tilt of the earth's axis shows how we're warmer when our hemisphere tilts toward the sun. But with all this spinning and circling and rotating and revolving, we don't fall off because gravity holds us. The illustrations have texture and charm, but also whimsy and a light, supple touch, as they move in close to the children's faces or out to the whole solar system. Terrific. (glossary) (Picture book. 5-10) Copyright Kirkus 2005 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2005 April #3
    G. Brian Karas, who narrated Atlantic from the ocean's perspective, now explores an even vaster topic in the idealistic profile On Earth. Spaceship Earth, pictured in limpid blues and greens, takes readers on "a giant ride in space,/ spinning like a merry-go-round." Pictures of children in rural fields alternate with abstract depictions of the planet rotating and orbiting around the sun, as the text explains that "by the time we get back to where we started, we're one year older." Karas distills profound concepts into pared-down sentences and impressionistic mixed-media illustrations. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2005 May
    PreS-Gr 2-A simple poetic text describes the Earth's daily and yearly cycles: "At night we turn away from the sun and see a universe of stars and planets while we dream of what we can do tomorrow." The paintings are as simple as the narrative; some show night and day with very large children on small planets (one is sleeping in darkness, the other is fishing in sunlight). Others show the passage of seasons as children go to school, celebrate birthdays, and stand by little trees in their various stages of growth. A few of the pictures go sideways in a manner that demonstrates some concepts very well; for example, gravity is concretely illustrated by figures standing on ground that runs perpendicular to the bottom of the page. Karas's distinctive cartoon figures will be familiar to anyone who knows his work, and his colors are gorgeous, even down to the endpapers (the front endpaper is sky blue and the back one is midnight blue). While this book does not present the information in a step-by-step fashion like Franklyn Branley's Sunshine Makes the Seasons (HarperCollins, 2005), it is just as outstanding in its own way, which is both more sophisticated and more childlike.-Lauralyn Persson, Wilmette Public Library, IL Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

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