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Book Cover for: My First Day, Steve Jenkins

My First Day

Steve Jenkins

Nominee:Volunteer State Book Awards -Primary (2015)
Nominee:South Carolina Childrens, Junior and Young Adult Book Award -Picture Book (2015)

The first day of life is different for every animal. Human newborns don't do much at all, but some animals hit the ground running. The Caldecott Honor-winning team Steve Jenkins and Robin Page apply their considerable talents to revealing how twenty two different species, from the emperor penguin to the Siberian tiger, adapt to that traumatic first few hours of life, with or without parental help. Jenkins's vividly colorful cut-paper illustrations are eye-poppingly three-dimensional and as exquisite as ever. While the text is short and sweet, an illustrated guide provides descriptions of the twenty two animals in the back. Fantastic!

Book Details

  • Publisher: Clarion Books
  • Publish Date: Jan 8th, 2013
  • Pages: 32
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.10in - 9.30in - 0.50in - 0.75lb
  • EAN: 9780547738512
  • Recommended age: 04-07
  • Categories: • Animals - Baby Animals• Science & Nature - Biology• Family - New Baby

About the Author

Jenkins, Steve: -

Steve Jenkins wrote and illustrated many nonfiction picture books for young readers, including the Caldecott Honor Book What Do You Do with a Tail Like This? His books have been called stunning, eye-popping, inventive, gorgeous, masterful, extraordinary, playful, irresistible, compelling, engaging, accessible, glorious, and informative.

Page, Robin: -

Robin Page has worked on numerous bestselling and award-winning titles with her husband and collaborator, Steve Jenkins, including Caldecott Honor Book What Do You Do with a Tail Like This? She lives in Boulder, Colorado.

More books by Steve Jenkins

Book Cover for: What Do You Do with a Tail Like This?: A Caldecott Honor Award Winner, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Apex Predators, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Our World: By the Numbers, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Actual Size, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: The Frog Book, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Toes, Teeth, and Tentacles: A Curious Counting Book, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Biggest, Strongest, Fastest, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Disasters by the Numbers: A Book of Infographics, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Looking Down, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Creature Features: Twenty-Five Animals Explain Why They Look the Way They Do, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Why Do Elephants Have Big Ears?: Questions -- And Surprising Answers -- About Animals, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: The Animal Book: A Collection of the Fastest, Fiercest, Toughest, Cleverest, Shyest--And Most Surprising--Animals on Earth, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Dinosaurs Roar Shaped Board Book with Lift-The-Flaps: Lift-The-Flap and Discover, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Animals by the Numbers: A Book of Infographics, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Eye to Eye/How Animals See the World: How Animals See the World, Steve Jenkins
Book Cover for: Down, Down, Down: A Journey to the Bottom of the Sea, Steve Jenkins

Praise for this book

"Fun and very educational."
--Booklist

"[A] handsome examination of child-rearing across the animal kingdom."
--Publishers Weekly

"Jenkins and Page's simple text effectively highlights the differing degrees of independence of a variety of species' young."
--Horn Book

"Jenkins and Page find yet another inviting way to connect young human readers and listeners to creatures who share their world . . . Appealing to a wide age range, this is another crowd pleaser."
--Kirkus

"The striking depictions of mother and child set against full-bleed colored backgrounds or clean white space should make for many return readings."
--School Library Journal, starred review

"The style would work as an easy read as well as a readaloud."
--The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books

"Jenkins's masterly paper collages achieve their usual high standards of zoological accuracy and beauty. The text is shrewdly written in the first-person voice of each baby animal, mingling personality with scientific fact."
--New York Times Online --