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We are All Animals

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Book Synopsis

We Are All Animals offers children an awe-inspiring new way to understand the animal kingdom.

This unique book reveals astonishing similarities in the anatomy – and many more characteristics – of humans and other animals, celebrating our entire furry, scaly, slimy, slippery, extended family.

Did you know that most animal bodies, including ours, are shaped like tubes? Or that humans share 75% of their genes with chickens? That rats are ticklish, and dolphins give each other names? Children will be delighted to discover how similar they are to bats, bees, dogs, frogs, jellyfish, giraffes, and many more. By encouraging readers to make connections between distant corners of the animal kingdom, this book celebrates the extraordinary ways in which all of Earth’s creatures are connected.

Created in partnership with the Humanimal Trust, a charity advocating collaboration between physicians and veterinarians, this book is underpinned by cutting-edge medical science. The charity’s founder – Professor Noel Fitzpatrick – is an internationally renowned veterinarian, who also stars in his own TV series, The Supervet (a nickname he has earned through the groundbreaking veterinary procedures he performs). He has written a foreword to the book, and his extensive medical expertise runs throughout every page.

Our Review Panel says...

We Are All Animals is part of the ‘What on Earth!’ children’s information books, exploring elements of life on Earth from Bees to Wind. This book focuses on the similarities between animals, in particular demonstrating common traits between different species and humans. The aim is to highlight that humans should treat other species as equally important,  as, after all, we are all animals.

The foreword, by ‘Supervet’ Professor Neil Fitzpatrick suggests that our similarities with other animals should mean doctors and vets work together to understand living things better and provide an equal amount of technology, medicines and care to all species of animal. Each double-page spread highlights a commonality between living things, e.g. we are all tubes (focusing on digestion), we are all networked (focusing on nervous systems), as all pass things on (focusing on genetics and inheritance) and so on. Each section introduces the topic, explaining some complex scientific processes in clear, child-friendly language, before giving specific examples in humans and then a range of different animal species. For example, in the ‘We all have feelings,’ pages, emotions are demonstrated through the fear of rattlesnakes, the grief of African elephants, the love of birds, the fun of bees and the joy of rats!

The illustrations by Mark Ruffle are clear and pleasing to the eye. Complex scientific diagrams are simplified yet still accurate. This is a great book to dip in and out of, but also useful in science lessons as it discusses areas covered in the National Curriculum for Science in clear and interesting ways.

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We are All Animals

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