Felicia Brower is a nature writer, living in beautiful Denver, Colorado. She specializes in gardening, home landscaping, low-water Colorado native plants, regionally-adapted seeds, sustainability, regenerative agriculture, permaculture practices, and travel. Nicole LaRue, a graphic designer and illustrator, believes every person—no matter their size, age, color, or status—can help create positive social change. Called upon at the eleventh hour to create the official logo for the 2017 Women’s March on Washington, she is no stranger to mighty work. Her clients include Chronicle Books, Abram’s Books, Oxford University Press, Compendium Inc., Madison Park Greetings, Johnson & Johnson, Chat Books, Tiny Prints, DC Shoes, American Eagle, and more. See her work at www.smallmadegoods.com. Nicole resides in Salt Lake City, Utah.
A key to identifying 40 tree species found in the contiguous United States. After an introduction that invites readers to a “tree ID adventure,” Brower, a Master Gardener, begins with a popular craft project: leaf rubbings. She then explains how to identify trees in language that the intended audience may find challenging; fundamental words are bold-faced and defined in the glossary. The author instructs readers to look closely at the leaves—their patterns, shapes, edges, and layout—and also at the bark. Then, using the table of contents as a two-part key, readers can find the group the leaves fall into (simple smooth, simple serrated, etc.) and look for the trees in that section. Spread by spread, what follows are entries on 40 tree species, from Eastern redbud to white fir. Each entry features an illustration, as well as the tree’s size and scientific name, a general description, a close-up of some of its parts, a map showing the part of the U.S. where the tree is native, the tree’s habitat and range, a fun fact, and info on its bark, leaves, flowers, and fruits. The trees include a majority of the most common in the lower 48 states, as well as the American chestnut, now sadly “harder to find.” Perhaps because the leaves, which are crucial to identification, aren’t always shown in detail, this offering feels a bit incomplete. Still, overall it will leave youngsters primed to look more carefully at trees, and readers of all ages will find plenty of sound information. An attractive handbook for beginning nature enthusiasts. (Nonfiction. 8-12) * Kirkus * This accessible field guide concentrates on visual elements like leaves, offering easy ways of identifying and differentiating types of trees. Most examples represent trees commonly found in the Eastern, Southern, and Midwestern parts of the U.S., with only one spanning the entire country (smooth sumac) and just a few found out West (Douglas fir, lodgepole pine, ponderosa pine, white fir). The 40 two-page spreads feature full-page drawings facing fact-filled, brief paragraphs identifying tree traits: products (nuts, sap, lumber), ecosystem support (pollination, homes and food for birds, insects, animals, and humans), a map indicating habitat and range, and sections on bark and leaves, fruits and seeds, and fun fact notes. The back cover touts this as a “portable guide—perfect for your back pocket, school bag, or even the basket on your bike.” There’s a log for recording various tree sightings, craft ideas, identification tips, a glossary, and suggestions for tree conservation. Intended for personal use, this still offers plenty of basic information while sparking curiosity. -- Kathleen McBroom * Booklist *