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Volcano Rising

di Elizabeth Rusch

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1043264,637 (4.4)Nessuno
Discusses volcanoes, describing what happens when they erupt, and highlighting eruptions throughout history.
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Great, informative introduction to volcanoes for younger readers. Excellent collage illustrations. ( )
  Sullywriter | May 22, 2015 |
excellent earth sciences picture book .... wonderful vocabulary and separation from the simple narrative text to the offset detailed info on each page providing more factual information. Great print awareness with bold font highlights POW! and HISSSSSS! Fantastic illustrations by Susan Swan. A wonderful Volcano Vocabulary list in the back of the book. ( )
  lscully | Aug 23, 2013 |
When kids think of volcanoes, they likely think of the awesome destructive power of famous volcanoes past and present - Mount Vesuvius, Krakatoa, Mount St. Helens, Mount Etna, Kilauea, and Mauna Loa. However, if you've ever read James Michener's epic novel, Hawaii, or traveled to Hawaii, you know of the incredible creative power of volcanoes. Each of the Hawaiian islands was created by a volcano, its molten lava rising, spreading, cooling, hardening, and eventually creating the Hawaiian island chain with its famous black sand beaches.

Volcano Rising focuses on this unique and often unheralded aspect of volcanoes, giving examples of various ways in which volcanoes may have "creative eruptions." A particularly helpful aspect of the book is its duality as a read-aloud for younger children and a more detailed text for independent readers. In white or black text against double-spread illustrations, large text is aimed at a read-aloud audience, while smaller text delves deeper,

"Creative eruptions can continue for a really long time. WHOOSH, fountains of red-hot lava squirt high into the air. GURGLE, stinky lava streams to the shore. TSSSS, fluid lava hits the ocean, steaming, and hardens to form new land." (for a read-aloud audience)

Followed by

"For more than twenty-five years, shield volcano Kilaueau (kee-lau-WAY-ah) on the Big Island of Hawaii has been in a state of creative eruption. Shield volcanoes have lots of vents, allowing runny lava to leak from cracks to form broad mounds that are shaped like shields.
Kilaueau's constant eruption has added more than 500 acres (202 hectares) to the island--that's more than 314 soccer fields! No one works or plays soccer on this new acreage yet. But they will. After all, where would the people of Hawaii live if not for the creative eruptions that helped build all their islands?"

Often an artistically illustrated nonfiction book lacks the punch of a photographic one, but not in Volcano Rising. Because the focus of the book is the process rather than the explosion, the colorfully inventive collage art of Susan Swan is perfectly suited to the text, helping to define the concept of creative eruptions in an art form created

"by manipulating found objects, hand-painted papers and scans of objects and textures in Adobe Photoshop to create new patterns,adding digital paintings; and then collaging the two together"

The effect is vibrant and stunning.

Volcano Vocabulary, Selected Bibliography, and Learn More sections round out this great new title.

http://shelf-employed.blogspot.com ( )
  shelf-employed | Jun 30, 2013 |
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