Bound To Stay Bound

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 Rotten! : vultures, beetles, slime, and nature's other decomposers
 Author: Sanchez, Anita

 Publisher:  Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (2019)

 Dewey: 581.7
 Classification: Nonfiction
 Physical Description: 83 p., col. ill., 23 cm

 BTSB No: 775617 ISBN: 9781328841650
 Ages: 7-11 Grades: 2-6

 Subjects:
 Biodegradation

Price: $22.38

Summary:
A funny and fact-filled look at decomposition, a fascinating and sometimes smelly aspect of the life cycle that's right under our noses.

 Illustrator: Ford, Gilbert
Accelerated Reader Information:
   Interest Level: MG
   Reading Level: 6.10
   Points: 2.0   Quiz: 501774

Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (10/15/18)
   School Library Journal (11/01/18)
   Booklist (12/01/18)
 The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (00/12/18)

Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 11/01/2018 Gr 3–6—Rot in all its forms is on delightfully disgusting display in this introduction to decomposition. The text is mostly in the form of short standalone sections with intriguing titles like "How to Eat Dead Stuff" and "The Guacamole That Refused to Die." The tone is humorous and informal throughout, clearly relishing the gross-out factor of dead, moldy, or stinky things. Whimsical cartoon illustrations add to the silliness and make no attempt at scientific accuracy. Full-bleed illustrations and spot art depict such things as bespectacled worms grooving to a concert, a beetle cooking up a pot of dung, and a fly tucking its larvae under a blanket. A small number of activities are included (not to mention a faux scratch-and-sniff panel that makes a point about aerobic decomposition). VERDICT Fun for pleasure reading and factual enough to satisfy science teachers, this title is recommended for anywhere young people take an interest in nature, compost, rot, and renewal.—Sarah Stone, San Francisco Public Library - Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

Booklist - 12/01/2018 “The smell of rotten is the sweet scent of life,” Sanchez writes, after explaining—with only light smears of gross detail—the worthy work of dung beetles, fungi, bacteria, earthworms, sharks, vultures, and the teeming residents of the “Rotten Log Hotel.” Young naturalists will relish the opportunity to learn about cadaverine and putrescene, along with the various processes and expediters of decomposition, and to venture into scientific frontiers with glimpses of recently discovered pollution-eating fungi and of bacteria with a taste for certain plastics. Some of her “Rot It Yourself” suggestions for general observations or activities may need more unpacking (parents will likely take a dim view of heaping garbage in the yard to make a compost pile, for instance), but she offers a lively general overview to which Ford’s informal scenes of wildlife in work clothes, great whites gathering around a picnic basket, and like visual foolery add genial notes. Even readers who don’t buy the claim that decomposition can seem . . . almost magical” will come away appreciating how artfully nature moves in cycles. - Copyright 2018 Booklist.

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