Atlas of Extinct Animals

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Atlas of Extinct Animals Author: Illustrators: Pavel Dvorsky, Jiri Grbavcic Format: Hardback First Published: Published By: Albatros nakladatelstvi as
string(2) "88"
Pages: 88 Illustrations and other contents: Color illustrations throughout Language: English ISBN: 9788000061269 Category:

The first book in this series presents animals that once walked the Earth, but have vanished due to the actions of humankind. In this book, award-winning poet Radek Maly tells the stories of fortyone extinct species and studies the causes of their sad demise. The large-format Atlas of Extinct Animals is supplemented with beautifully expressive full-page illustrations by gifted artist Jiri Grbavcic and detailed pictures by renowned scientific illustrator Pavel Dvorsky. The gorgeous, detailed depictions and descriptions of species and their fates can only serve as a reminder and as a warning of how much life has already disappeared from the Earth. The atlas also shows that the disappearances continue. Page by page it nears the present day and ultimately introduces creatures that still existed a few years ago, like the Zanzibar leopard (until 1996) and the Chinese river dolphin (until 2007). In the end, we are left with a bitter question: Which creature will next be added to this atlas? This book was selected by White Ravens 2020 for the annual catalog of book recommendations in the field of international children’s and youth literature.

Weight0.3762 kg
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"Some of these animals died out thousands of years ago, but some of them still walked the earth a few years ago and now they are gone. Read about the impact of humankind on nature and how easy a whole species can vanish from the Earth's surface and let us wonder - will humankind become the next chapter? "And they all lived happily ever after. The fairy-tale adage applies to none of the 41 creatures introduced in this atlas. Mammoth, dodo, and Neanderthal man: all extinct." White Ravens review "Radek Maly's Atlas of Extinct Animals, an oversized survey containing exceptionally beautiful illustrations by Jiri Grbavcic and Pavel Dvorsky. Elementary-grade readers will relish the full-page science drawings that accompany facts about the Falkland Islands Wolf, the Huia bird, the Long-Tailed Hopping Mouse, and others. Exceptional book especially recommended for creating eye-catching library displays." Donovans Literary Services "I loved reading this compilation of the intriguing and beautiful animals that used to inhabit our planet. The illustrations were an added bonus and contributed needed visual aid in picturing not only the animal itself but the environment that they would have inhabited. An interesting, beautiful, and useful addition to any and all animal lovers library." Tina Hewitt, blogger "Five out of five is the only response to a book that does exactly what it wants to do, and does it better than expected. Check the artwork - the standard is of the "how does this man ever not have a commission" quality, giving great and realistic poses to the critters concerned, and putting just as much care into the background detail as the fur and feathers that are the prime subject. He gets every verso page, while the recto is for the text - although that too is illustrated in a more scientific manner. Here we learn of many extinct animals, some of which chances are you've not heard of, unless you have a specialist knowledge in what man has slaughtered. Steller's sea cow was a huge galumphing bulge of meat and oil, and never left its partner when s/he was shot. Giant tortoises from several places were so docile and low-maintenance they were even packed up to live on board ship as a living larder. Here are birds bludgeoned with the last ever egg just trampled on, species hunted for game or exterminated deliberately, and here is Tibbles the cat putting paid to a cute, dusky-looking wren. Of course, just while some people argue we're trying to keep the cuter animals alive that are endangered today (hello, giant panda), nobody was lookist in determining what should get killed off - and much of the time it wasn't really deliberate, although mahoosive eagles I'd never heard of were soon despatched from New Zealand. What surprised me was the fact that even if these beasts survived somewhat to the world of science, we still have so little proof of what they were like - the quagga is not exactly everywhere, even stuffed or skeletally. Elsewhere it could be said there are few surprises in this volume, but the quality of it is still undeniable." John Lloyd, reviewer "The Atlas of Extinct Animals is a beautiful book filled with incredibly detailed illustrations. As a parent who is often asked about extinct animals or "was the dodo bird actually real?" it is great to have a resource that provides a visual example of what these extinct beings looked like as well as details about them and where they lived. Absolutely loved this book." Media 876444 "I cried when I read this beautifully illustrated account of 41 species and their heartbreaking demise. How could these gorgeous creatures, including the Zanzibar leopard and the Chinese river dolphin, no longer exist and what can the world do to prevent another species from being added to the list? Geared to readers aged 9 to 17, but an important reminder for adults too of the fragility of life. Out March 22." Literary R, Reviewer "A highly informative, no-nonsense reference text that provides insights into a variety of 41 extinct animals. Dates of extinction, scientific illustration, currently living reference animal for size comparisons, scientific name, common names, map of regional locations, and historic accounts are included. Causes for extinction are listed, where possible, based off current information. A superb resource for middle grade and high school students researching climate, ecological, and human impacts on fauna." Educator 901032

Author Biography

Radek Maly is a Czech writer, poet, translator and university teacher. Of his works, his book for young adults Franz Kafka - A Man of His Time and Our Own (2017) and the collection of poems for children Postman Wind (2011; entered on the IBBY Honour Roll) have achieved international success. Pavel Dvorsky has illustrated dozens of publications, with scientific and popular-scientific themes predominating, is a teacher at the Secondary School for the Decorative Arts in Brno (Czech Republic), and since 2004 he has maintained a certain variety in his work by designing stamps for the Czech Post Office.