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A Field Guide to Leaflings

Hardback

Main Details

Title A Field Guide to Leaflings
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Owen Churcher
Illustrated by Niamh Sharkey
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:40
Dimensions(mm): Height 294,Width 256
ISBN/Barcode 9781783425228
Audience
Children / Juvenile
Illustrations Watercolour and ink

Publishing Details

Publisher Templar Publishing
Imprint Templar Publishing
Publication Date 21 October 2021
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Among the branches and roots of some of our planet's most important inhabitants, live the leaflings. These tiny creatures protect trees and help manage their interactions, their cycles and tell their stories. In A Field Guide to Leaflings, meet leaflings from all over the world and the trees they live with. Travel from an ancient holly tree in Ireland, to a cherry blossom in Japan, and climb to the highest branches of a giant redwood in California. The leaflings will show you how trees breathe, make food, support many forms of life and what they mean to people all around the world.

Author Biography

Owen Churcher is a graphic design and media tutor working in North Dublin and writer of children's picture book texts. He studied photography and multimedia and worked in a series of bookshops, and in eLearning before teaching. Owen is currently collaborating on a new series of picture books with his wife, the author and illustrator, Niamh Sharkey. Together they live in Dublin with their three children, two dogs and two goldfish. Niamh Sharkey is an award-winning author and illustrator of children's picture books and former Children's Laureate of Ireland. Her books have won numerous awards including the prestigious Mother Goose Award for the Best New Illustrator and the Bisto Book of the Year for her first two picture books; Tales of Wisdom and Wonder and The Gigantic Turnip. In 2019 On the Road with Mavis and Marge won the Junior Book of the Year Award at the Irish Book Awards and Tales from Old Ireland was included in the International Board of Books for Young People Honour Book List in 2002. She is also the creator of and executive producer of Henry Hugglemonster, an animated pre-school series on Disney Junior, based on her picture book I'm a Happy Hugglewug (Walker Books).

Reviews

This collaboration between design tutor Owen Churcher and former Children's Laureate of Ireland Niamh Sharkey is a wonderful non-fiction find that packs in a lot of nature information as well as introducing us to the magical leaflings. Each leafling has a distinct character and role - Hiroki prepares the branches for blossom while Flann minds the web of roots that connect the copse or forest. This is an absorbing and brilliantly designed book to spark imagination and curiosity about the wonderful (and global) world of trees. * Absolutely Education * This interactive picturebook by the well-known Niamh Sharkey and newcomer Owen Churcher contains a wealth of tree knowledge. Our guides, the leaflings, invite us into their world where we learn about the familiar oak and holly, and the perhaps lesser-known and fascinating kapok or Huangshan pine. The illustrations, flaps to lift and text will keep busy readers entertained over many rereadings. This is a celebration of the majesty and beauty of trees and all who love and protect them. (Age 4-8) * Irish Times * The Best Books of 2021: Baby & Toddler With a cast including goblins, magic puddings and a mushroom queen, Gauld's adorable and exquisitely illustrated tale of a young robot's search for his sister combines gentle magical adventure with a whimsical tribute to sibling devotion. * Waterstones * In A Field Guide to Leaflings authors Owen Churcher and Niamh Sharkey accompany little readers as they travel the world and meet the Leaflings - the secret guardians of trees. They hear all about the trees they protect - from an ancient holy tree in Ireland to a cherry blossom in Japan and a giant redwood in California. * Big Issue * "No one is too small to make a difference," as the leaflings tell us. In this guide's delightful conceit, every tree has its tiny leafling, and every leafling has a specific role: protecting, connecting, constructing, etc. Leaflings resemble smiling seed pods with big, round eyes and small bodies, some in minute skirts. Whatever their tree roles, their job in this book is to explain how trees work, and they do it winningly. Akina and Hiroki tell us about sakura, while Iarla and Etain cover holly. Hugo takes on the kapok; several real-life critters that make their home in this giant South American tree can be found here along with information on photosynthesis. On to oak, baobab, kauri, red river gum, redwood, peepal, Huangshan pine, and sweet chestnut, each with companion leaflings and assorted animals. Among the few humans are a child who uses a wheelchair, one in hijab, and several who are brown-skinned; among leaflings, faces might be green, tan, pale, etc., while some bodies are wide, others tall. There's information about city trees and advice on observing nature. The use of intricate serif fonts dictates lap- or independent-reading only; indeed, the delicate, detailed, page-filling watercolor and ink illustrations (like a naturalist's notebook) are for poring over. A whimsical way to teach budding environmentalists about trees around the world. -- Kirkus * Kirkus *