ALA Booklist
(Thu Oct 31 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
No matter where you are in the world, chances are good that there's a crow close by. Meet the corvid family, including the American crow, raven, jay, and magpie, that has long lived side by side with humans, taking advantage of the abundant food supply that people produce. This may not be the splashiest species, the book suggests, but what it lacks in flashy feathers or celestial singing is more than made up for by its incredible competence and creativity. There are impressive accounts of tool use, problem-solving skills, miraculous memory, and a penchant for playfulness, plus a cross section of a crow's skull suggesting enormous brainpower. A final recommendation for crow-watching concludes with a mischievous reminder that the intelligent birds may be watching humans right back. The lively text is accompanied by arresting earth-toned illustrations that offer a beautiful bird's-eye view of the world, and the collaged style suits their scrappy existence perfectly, brimming with intriguing details (background book pages, typewritten labels) and abundant texture sure to keep readers invested. An outstanding ode to the clever crow.
Kirkus Reviews
An admiring tribute to the habits and smarts of the corvid clan.Gill's standout mixed-media illustrations feature individual and group portraits of numerous crows and crow cousins, stylishly rendered in fine, exact detail. These visuals, along with a gallery of eggs, will draw the eye first, but young audiences will find Butterworth's rapturous observations, delivered in multiple sizes of type, likewise worth lingering over. "If a crow looks at you with its small, round eye, you can be sure it's thinking," she writes. "Crows are clever birds. Very clever birds." If she sells them rather short by characterizing them as "notâ¦graceful to look at or lovely to listen to," she does suggest that, considering their canny problem-solving and tool-using skills, they're as intelligent as monkeys and apes. She urges readers to find out for themselves just how bright they are; given that they live all around the world in many habitats, they're particularly easy to find and study. (And, she notes, the crow family contains more than 100 different kinds of birds.) "Crows are smart, clever, crafty, and playful," she closes, "just like you!"Brief but as lively and appealing as its subject. (index) (Informational picture book. 6-8)