Tag Archives: nature

The Tree of Life: Charles Darwin, by Peter Sis

The Tree of Life: Charles Darwin, by Peter Sis (Farrar, Strauss & Giroux, 2002, 44 pp, ages 6-10) My enchantment with Sis’s work, based on previous encounters (The Wall, Nicky & Vera, Three Golden Keys, Starry Messenger), made this book a must-have when I chanced upon it (for $3, Very Good!). Beyond that, my acquaintance with Darwin is embarrassingly slight, and Sis offered easy access. His intricate illustration style, merging text with detailed images, may be out of vogue. But I love books that reward repeated returns and close examination with a wealth of facts and information. (For a different style with similar effect check out author-illustrator Melissa Sweet, A River of Words, Just the Right Word, Celia Planted a Garden, Some Writer! and more.)

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In Honor of Cicely Mary Baker: Creation Care Books

For some time I have wanted to correlate book reviews with author birthdays, but I never seemed able to pull off the timing. When it came to my attention that June 28 is the birthday of British poet-painter Cicely Mary Barker (1895–1973), it seemed an auspicious occasion to complete another back burner project, a collection of reviews about creation care.

My husband’s cousins introduced us to Barker’s charming seasonal/botanical paintings and poems when our daughter was in preschool. I loved learning about nature while immersed in the mystique with which Barker infused it. (Her Flower Fairies of the Autumn volume appears here: Autumn Picture Books). I was also intrigued to discover she was a devout Christian, a fact reflected overtly in some but not all of her books, as well as in her Christmas cards and installations for churches. Among several online biographies is this from current publisher Penguin Books: Flower Fairies. Cicely Mary Barker and Her Art, by Jane Laing, lamentably out of print, contains an expanded biography as well as many of Barker’s seasonal and devotional paintings.    

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Sugar Birds, by Cheryl Grey Bostrom

Sugar Birds was an atypical reading choice for me on several counts, but its convergence of birds, faith, and neurodiversity piqued my interest. Though I don’t read many fiction titles from Christian publishers, I keep an eye on them, and few, it seems, are written by naturalists or feature neurodivergent characters.

An added attraction for me was the Pacific Northwest setting. Astute descriptions of the natural world merit one endorser’s invocation of Annie Dillard. Bostrom, a poet, delivers Craftsman-style prose–clean, flowing lines, artful but free of excessive ornamentation.

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Explorers’ Sketchbooks: The Art of Discovery and Nature, by Huw Lewis-Jones and Kari Herbert

I discovered this book shortly after its publication in 2017. My ninety-year-old mother-in-law had developed fairly advanced dementia. But her lifelong appreciation for books, cartography, history, exploration, and the art of illustration had not failed her. The fortuitous coincidence of all those elements allowed us to ramble through these pages together on multiple occasions with some semblance of former camaraderie.

Arranged alphabetically by the names of the explorers, this visually stunning book represents a wealth of information and artistry, not to mention a herculean task of compilation. As the title indicates, it represents excerpts from the sketchbooks of more than seventy explorers and documenters of the natural world. Some names are familiar—John James Audubon, Meriwether Lewis, Carl Linnaeus, David Livingstone—most much less so. Most are men; a little more than a tenth are women.

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