Bound To Stay Bound

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 Beatrix Potter, scientist
 Author: Metcalf, Lindsay H.

 Publisher:  Whitman (2020)

 Dewey: 823
 Classification: Biography
 Physical Description: [32] p., col. ill., 26 cm

 BTSB No: 639816 ISBN: 9780807551752
 Ages: 4-8 Grades: K-3

 Subjects:
 Potter, Beatrix, -- 1866-1943 -- Childhood and youth
 English authors -- 20th century -- Biography
 Artists -- Great Britain -- Biography
 Women -- Biography

Price: $21.88

Summary:
Everyone knows Beatrix Potter as the creator of the Peter Rabbit stories. But before that, she was a girl of science. As a child, Beatrix collected nature specimens; as a young adult, she was an amateur mycologist presenting her research on mushrooms and other fungi to England's foremost experts. Like many women of her time, she remained unacknowledged by the scientific community, but her keen eye for observation led her to an acclaimed career as an artist and storyteller.

 Illustrator: Wu, Junyi


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Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (07/15/20)
   School Library Journal (08/01/20)
   Booklist (08/01/20)

Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 08/01/2020 K-Gr 3—This picture book biography stresses Beatrix Potter's scientific research. As a child, Potter found inspiration in nature. The text describes her methods as observing, questioning, collecting, and recording. Potter and her brother Bertram loved animals. However, when a pet died, she mourned the loss and also studied the animal bones. As Metcalf explains in an extensive note, artists in the 19th century boiled their dead pets so they could remove the skin and muscles, preserve the skeletons, and therefore learn about the inner workings of animals. Potter's parents encouraged her art, but she did not receive the same formal education as her brother. She was deeply interested in fungi; she spent years experimenting with spores, making sample slides to study under her microscope, and creating detailed drawings of fungi. When she tried to submit her work to the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew, male scientists initially dismissed her findings. Why she stopped studying fungi and pivoted to children's books is not explained; the answer seems to have been lost to history. Wu's colorful, vivid illustrations appear to be rendered in pastels. Wu does not attempt to replicate Potter's style but captures a sense of her drawings within the larger spreads. VERDICT Celebrating how Potter's talents and interests informed each other, this inviting biography illuminates an unfamiliar aspect of an accomplished woman's life.—Lucinda Snyder Whitehurst, St. Christopher's Sch., Richmond, VA - Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

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