SCIENCE
Sayre, April Pulley

Being Frog

(2) PS A green frog moves through its woodland environment, its motions described in short rhyming sentences that match the pace of the creature as it hunts, crawls, jumps, or remains motionless ("It climbs a cliff. / Mossy. Steep. / It sits so still. / Then, suddenly-- / LEAP!"). The pairing of Sayre's poems with her photographs is seamless. The pictures are skillfully composed, using light and depth of focus to center attention on frog facial expressions or positions, or to show how well the frogs use water, rocks, and foliage as camouflage. Often with one or both eyes seemingly looking directly at the viewer, the frog--and Sayre's poem--invite readers to contemplate their sentience. "A frog / is a being. / It is watching. / It is seeing... / Does it ponder? / We don't yet know." In an end note, Sayre (Woodpecker Wham!, rev. 5/15; Warbler Wave, rev. 3/18) explains her enduring relationship with the frogs in this book (who live in her local pond) and explains the differences between her subjective observations and scientific study. Recommendations for additional resources, including an app that plays frog sounds, are included.

RELATED 

Get connected. Join our global community of more than 200,000 librarians and educators.

This coverage is free for all visitors. Your support makes this possible.

We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing.

ALREADY A SUBSCRIBER?