48°F
weather icon Cloudy

Kids can slither into snake science with new book

All summer long, you’ve been asking your Mom for a pet.

She keeps saying "no," and you totally understand why. She thinks she’ll end up taking care of it and feeding it. She says she’ll have to clean up after it, because she thinks you won’t.

What she doesn’t know is that the pet you want never has to be walked. It doesn’t eat very often, its food isn’t expensive, and there’s very little clean-up involved. The pet you’re thinking about is different, so you’ll want to learn about it before you get one. And by reading "Awesome Snake Science!" by Cindy Blobaum, you’ll school yourself enough to be able to teach Mom, too.

The first question, though, is: where do you live? Unless your house is in Ireland, New Zealand, Greenland, on the North or South Pole or atop Denali or Everest, there’s probably already a snake nearby. Cool, huh?

So now that you’ve decided to become a herpetologist (who studies amphibians and reptiles) or an ophiologist (who studies snakes, specifically), you’ll need to know that you’ll be busy: there are around 3,000 kinds of snakes in the world, and each kind has adapted to its surroundings.

Some snakes are tiny, like the less-than-four-inch-long thread snake. Some, like the Anaconda, can weigh up to 500 pounds! Some are common (like corn snakes), while the Antiguan racer is so rare that scientists only recently rediscovered it.

"All snakes have teeth," says Blobaum, but the fangs are the ones that make a snake kind of famous. Fangs look dangerous – and they definitely can be – but they’re also necessary because, without them, a snake couldn’t eat. Fangs help the snake catch and hold prey, his gape (open mouth) determines how he swallows it, and his sharp teeth pull the meal toward his throat. Snake venom (which comes from the fangs) isn’t always poisonous, by the way. Some venom is used as medicine.

As for the snake’s skin, it’s also pretty cool. Snake skin stretches to make room for lunch. It’s waterproof, overlapping protection for the critter. And the scaly colors on a snake’s body can be used as camouflage, warning or lures for prey – which really ain’t nothing to hissss at!

So you say your child is interested in things of a slithery sort? That won’t rattle either of you when you’ve got "Awesome Snake Science!" in your house.

From colorful to camouflaged, pets to poison, Blobaum gives kids a "good foundation of basic knowledge about snakes" so they can become mini-experts on the reptiles. Readers on the younger side will appreciate step-by-step activities, which help understand snake anatomy and behavior, while older kids will like the tips and trivia, as well as the solid information included here. Kids of all ages will appreciate that there are pictures in this book but, alas, they’re not in color.

Still, if you’ve got a 7- to 13-year-old herpetologist around, you can’t go wrong with this informative, useful book. For them, "Awesome Snake Science!" is one to coil up with.

View publishes Terri Schlichenmeyer’s children’s book reviews weekly.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
Former homeless Las Vegas teen spotlights ongoing issue

“I consider myself lucky because I had a backpack,” he said at a TED Talk in June in Traverse City, Michigan. “And because along the way I found some of the most beautiful, compassionate and courageous people that not only helped me through this time but who have left a lasting impression stamped on my heart.”

Robert Hoge’s memoir ‘Ugly’ is beautiful

You’re having a bad hair day. You feel fat in those jeans. And you’ll never complain again, once you’ve read “Ugly” by Robert Hoge.

‘Cool Nature’ will help young scientists feel smart

Just by looking at them, you can tell what kind of rocks they are and where they came from. You also know a little about biology,astronomy and what makes you tick, so why not learn more by reading “Cool Nature” by Amy-Jane Beer?

‘Cool Nature’ will help young scientists feel smart

Just by looking at them, you can tell what kind of rocks they are and where they came from. You also know a little about biology,astronomy and what makes you tick, so why not learn more by reading “Cool Nature” by Amy-Jane Beer?

Kids will love creeping through the pages of ’Frightlopedia’

Ever since your child has been young, (s)he’s known that you’d be around for comfort when things got too scary. Well, stand by.What’s inside “Frightlopedia” may still leave you on sentry duty.

New Berkeley Breathed book will charm all ages

I have no socks. Author Berkley Breathed just charmed them off me. Kids will love the colorfully wild illustrations and the basic tale of love and friendship in “The Bill the Cat Story.” They’ll appreciate Bill’s underwear and his goofy “ack.”

Engage teen curiosity with ‘Unlock the Weird!’

While parts of it may be disturbing to wee ones, trivia-loving kids ages 12 to adult will pick this book, for sure. When enjoying “Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Unlock the Weird!” curiosity is key.

Summer tall-tale adventure relies on illustrations to spin story

Lies, liars, lying. Your child has undoubtedly heard those words lately on the news, and he knows better, right? But, sometimes, embellishment is oh-so-tempting, and “The Truth about My Unbelievable Summer” is a perfect example.