Member Reviews

Nighttime. Soft darkness envelopes all. This is the time of the owl, the bat, the fox. This is the time of crickets going crickee crickee. Frogs join the chorus- ribbit, ribbit. This isn't a time to fear, no, not at all. The authors introduce readers to a variety of nocturnal creatures from various habitats. Each beastie has a uniquely enhanced sense. There are exercises for readers to practice enhancing our own senses.

First up is Great Horned Owl with her big yellow eyes. Those eyes can detect the merest twitch of a mouse's tail, and her flight is silent as she strikes. Next comes the little Spring Peeper. This teensy frog has outstanding hearing! Deer come after. I had no clue they 'talked’ via scents. Gila Monster teaches us how to use taste to explore the environment. Spider teaches the finer points of touch, while Fox puts proprioception and kinesthetics on show. There's a chapter devoted to how some animals are basically living compasses, with innate knowing of magnetic north. At the end is a resource section, and a glossary.

I learned quite a bit from this book! I had no idea owls had more rods than cones in their eyes, giving them a greater ability to process things in black, white, grey, and to detect those miniscule movements in the grass. Or that deer communicated via various scents they create. Spiders can pick up the faintest vibrations, and tell a difference between food and foe.

My cubs and I enjoyed trying the exercises, with varying results. With my one eye, it didn't take much to get the disappearing head trick going. Funny that it might but have been the cause of seeing 'headless’ horsemen. Trying the scent and taste experiments were fun. The touch one were too much for me, trying to surpass what is natural for me. Losing my sight, and becoming legally, if not completely, blind heightened my sense of touch.

This is a perfect book for those who are nature-lovers!

***Many thanks to Netgalley and Rowman & Littlefield for providing an egalley in exchange for a fair and honest review.

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Wait Till it Gets Dark is a fun book that challenges the reader to open up the five senses and see the night in a different way. It is illustrated with colorful images of the animals, as well as diagrams that show the scientific principles behind the sense being described. It’s a great way to open up a whole new world to your kids.

Each chapter discusses one particular sense. Everything from eyes like an owl, to nose like a deer. Along the way, kids learn how these animals are particularly well adapted to life after the sun goes down. Easy and fun activities are included so kids can explore their own senses after dark and try to sense the world in the same way the wild animals do. There are activities that can be done as individuals as well as groups.

There are suggestions sprinkled throughout the text on how kids can help the species, such as watching for them crossing roads at night, and contributing to various citizen science projects. The appendix of the book has ideas about how kids can make their own contributions, including helping keep skies dark at night, listening for frogs for FrogWatch USA, helping measure firefly populations with an app, and documenting moth sightings.

For the bigger words in the text, there is a handy glossary at the end where kids can look up their meanings. The bibliography lists some excellent resources, should you want to go further and learn more about this fascinating subject.

The dark really isn’t that scary after all. Once you understand it, it becomes a fascinating time where animals conduct their lives. This book will help young readers learn to understand more about nature, and the dark that falls each night will no longer be so scary.

I thank NetGalley and the publisher for the advance reader copy I received in exchange for my honest review.

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Wait Till It Gets Dark is a children's non fiction book written by Anita Sanchez and George Steele, and Illustrated by John Himmelman. It’s night. It’s dark. It’s time to go indoors—or is it? The outdoors at night can be a scary place, but this book will help young readers investigate the mysterious nature of night. To explore the night, it would be great to have eyes like an owl, the sensitive nose of a deer, and feet that can move as silently as a fox. Humans aren’t quite as good as nocturnal animals at navigating the darkness, but we can come surprisingly close. Our senses are much sharper than we realize, if we learn how to use them. Some scientists are even researching the sensory abilities of human hair!

Wait Till It Gets Dark is a fun and interesting look at what happens outside after dark. I like that the book is broken up into chapters which each focus on a different animals. Readers get a detailed look at how the creature uses its senses and adaptions to explore the night time. The book also explores the senses and abilities of humans, and invites young readers to explore their own abilities. I enjoyed the experiments, and the focus on animal senses, and the colors used in the accompanying artwork. The art work was good, but there were some pieces that just did not meet my expectations, but that could have been more a matter of personal style than anything else. I think the book was geared towards younger kids than I expected, so it would be useful for discussing why you do not need to be afraid of the dark, in preparation of a nighttime walk or camp out for the younger set, as well as the senses and animal skills.

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What a fun way to not only teach kids about nature in the dark, but also to get them over their fear of the dark. Filled with fun facts, activities, and scientific explanations for things like the headless horseman(!), it's a great book to give a young child. I don't know how much it would have helped my fears of being in the dark as a child, but I'm sure it would have been a nice resource to have.

Honestly, some of the activity suggestions were things that I, as an adult, decided to try out in the backyard.

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