Skip to main content

Review: Search for a Giant Squid

 

By Amy Seto Forrester & Andy Chou Musser
Chronicle Books, 2023. Informational. 93 pages.

This is one of my favorite informational books of year. This choose-your-own-adventure tale has you looking for a giant squid in the vast ocean. The beginning of the book introduces you to different types of people on an expedition team, discusses what it's like to get ready for an underwater research trip, and shows you different parts of a research vessel. After that you'll be able to pick your pilot, select your submersible, and decide on a dive site. Although you only find the squid in one ending of the book, each of the different dives that you choose will teach you about cool things you can see in the ocean. Whether your finding a sunken ship, exploring an underwater lake, or spotting a vast array of other rare ocean life, your kids will love reading this book again and again to find different endings.

If you haven't signed up for The Great Genre Challenge yet, sign up now and read Search for a Giant Squid for your book in the informational category. You seriously won't regret it!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

If You Like...KPop Demon Hunters

KPop Demon Hunters has been one of the most talked-about movies of the summer. If you loved this movie as much as I did, you don't want the magic (or the music) to stop. Try reading these books that touch on some of the same topics and themes as the animated hit! Brick Dust and Bones By M. R. Fournet New York: Feiwel and Friends, 2023. Fiction. 247 pages. Orphaned Marius works in the family business--as their cemetery's ghost caretaker. However, Marius also moonlights as a monster hunter in order to earn the costly Mystic currency he needs to bring his mother back from the dead. As the window to bring his mother back begins to close, Marius's exploits get more and more dangerous, and he may have set his sights on a monster too big to handle on his own. Like Mira, Marius longs for familial connection, and his work as a monster hunter will satisfy the thrill of demon hunting for fans the movie. Where's Halmoni? By Julie J. Kim Seattle, WA: Little Bigfoot, 2017. Comics. W...

Review: The Teacher of Nomad Land

The Teacher of Nomad Land: A World War II Story By Daniel Nayeri Montclair, NJ: Levine Querido, 2025. Historical fiction. 181 pgs. In 1941 Iran, 13-year-old Babak will do anything to stay with his younger sister Sana, who is 8. After their father is killed during the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran, the siblings are left orphaned and Babak takes over guardianship to prevent the two from being separated. Carrying his father's blackboard on his back, Babak and Sana set off from Isfahan to find the nomadic tribes as they make their yearly trek across the mountains. Along the way, they encounter a suspicious man named Vulf, a friendly Englishman with a name that means cabbage, and a Jewish boy named Ben who has Vulf hot on his heels. As he is known for doing, Daniel Nayeri weaves a highly readable adventure with threads of philosophy about God, the ties of family, and musings about how cultures can reconcile across differences. The setting of this novel is ingeniously unique, and a lengt...

Review: The Forest of a Thousand Eyes

The Forest of a Thousand Eyes Written by Frances Hardinge Illustrated by Emily Gravett New York: Amulet Books, 2025. Fantasy. 120 pgs. Feather lives on the edge of The Forest, in a community perched on the top of a stone wall. Her entire life has been a balance of keeping the wild forest and it's dangerous creatures at bay. As a gatherer, Feather is tasked to venture down the Wall and find supplies, but it's obvious to everyone that there is less and less to forage. When a stranger named Merildun offers a map of the known world in exchange for a spyglass, Feather is tricked into giving away her community's most valuable possession. In a frantic race for survival, Feather pursues after Merildun and discovers a series of isolated communities fighting against a hostile nature. This novel is a quick read for many readers, but the excellent illustrations - at times haunting and at others magical - will prompt extra time for close study. The illustrations perfectly support a lavi...