Showing posts with label Clover Robin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clover Robin. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Super Swifts by Justin Anderson illustrated by Clover Robin


Subtitle: The small bird with amazing powers



Super Swifts is set in Africa, Europe and the UK BUT we do have swifts here in Australia - ork-tailed Swift (Apus pacificus); House Swift (Apus affinis); White-throated Needletail (Hirundapus caudacutus) and the Uniform Swiftlet (Aerodramus vanikorensis). One of our Australian netball teams is named The Swifts!

I find the topic of bird migration endlessly fascinating. Click the label on this post to find more books on this topic - try to find Circle by Australian illustrator Jeannie Baker. 

Swifts are a family of highly aerial birds known as Apodidae, which reside within the Apodiformes order alongside hummingbirds. ... Swifts have small, weak legs, which led to them sometimes being depicted without feet historically. ...  There are about 100 species of swifts, which are known for their high speeds, with the white-throated needletail reaching up to 169 km/h. They have elongated wingtip bones and the ability to rotate their wings from the base, which aids in their maneuverability and efficiency in flight. Swiftlets have evolved a form of echolocation to navigate dark caves. These birds are found worldwide except in the extremes of the polar, desert, and some oceanic islands, and migratory swifts travel from temperate regions to the tropics in winter. Their nests, often attached to vertical surfaces with saliva or located in wall cavities, are unique—some are used in the traditional bird's nest soup. Swifts are insectivores, hunting mid-flight, and their breeding and development patterns are more similar to seabirds than passerines. While no swift species has been recorded as extinct since 1600, some are considered endangered or vulnerable ... (Source)

All about swifts:
  • Coloured dark, sooty brown but can look black against the sky 
  • Pale patch on the throat, but this is often difficult to see in flight 
  • Long, pointed wings held in a ‘boomerang’ shape 
  • Wings are narrower than those of a Swallow or martin 
  • Short, forked tail which can be folded to a point 
  • Bullet-shaped head 
  • You’ll often hear them before you see them – they make an unmistakable, high-pitched ‘scream’ 
  • Swifts can travel up to 500 miles in one day
  • They 'sleep' while flying - this is called unihemispheric slow-wave sleep, where one half of their brain remains alert while the other half enters a sleep state.
  • Swift fly slowly through rain as a way to keep clean
  • Swift mate for life
  • They can catch as many as 50,000 insects in a day
  • They can live up to 21 years
Here is a map showing the journey of one swift in 2010 and you could show this video to your students:


Image source: Turning the Stones

The first thing I noticed in the two books I read today about swifts (see below for the second title) is their large eyes. So, I went hunting for a photo of a swift.


Images source: Audubon Society

I also thought about collective nouns which is a topic I find quite fascinating. What do you call a group of swifts? I found four possibilities Flight, Scream, Flock or Kettle!

Then I found this one - a sweep of swifts:

Swifts are highly agile and acrobatic birds known for their remarkable speed and graceful movements in the sky. When witnessed together, their collective presence forms a breathtaking spectacle as they swoop, loop, and glide through the air, displaying remarkable synchronization and coordination. The term sweep embodies the seamless and synchronized movements performed by these swifts, as if they are brushing through the atmosphere with remarkable elegance. The sight of a Sweep of Swifts evokes a sense of awe and wonder, as these social birds create a hypnotizing performance while efficiently navigating their surroundings.



Publisher blurbA swift may not look like anything special—it’s just a plain brown bird, small enough to nestle in the palm of your hand—but these superheroes of the avian world can fly incredible distances amazingly quickly, reaching speeds of up to seventy miles per hour and spending ten months of every year in the air. Follow one female swift from the steamy forests of tropical central Africa to northern Europe as she navigates arid desert and restless ocean, dodging predators along the way. Eating, drinking, and sleeping on the wind, she won’t rest until she’s reached her nesting site. Woven through with fascinating facts amplified in an author’s note and index, Super Swifts fuses gorgeous collage illustrations and a lilting text to evoke the grandeur of a voyage like no other—and introduce a singular bird with amazing powers.

Text in a larger font provides a smooth narrative, ideal for a read-aloud, while text in a smaller font offers intriguing facts. A series of text boxes describe the swifts’ symbiotic relationship with the louse flies that ride north in their feathers, lay eggs in swift nests, and send a new generation of swift lice south in the fall. Robin’s mixed-media illustrations show the changing scenery in double-page spreads; smaller vignettes depict nesting details and a thrilling scene in which our protagonist must evade an attacking falcon. Kirkus

Super Swifts is published by Walker Books. I need to explain this series (and my confusion). When Walker Books started this series, where a narrative is paired with facts presented on the same page in a smaller font,  they were called Read and Wonder. To me this was the perfect series name. Then many years later the name changed to Nature Storybooks. Same format, same fabulous topics and most importantly same highly skilled illustrators. Fast forward to today - Walker Books are still producing these wonderful books which need to be added to EVERY school and public library BUT now there is no series name.  I can only ask why?

Companion book (you need this one in your library too):


I am a huge fan of collage art by Clover Robin - here is her instagram page. Here are some two books I have talked about here she has illustrated:





Other Read and Wonder or Nature Storybook titles:





Thursday, September 8, 2022

Together by Isabel Otter illustrated by Clover Robin

Here is another book illustrated by my newest favourite illustrator (this changes every week) Clover Robin. I have previously talked about two books by Isabel Otter - I am a Fish; and Dear Earth

The subtitle of Together is: 

Animal partnerships in the wild

Blurb: Follow a flock of cranes on a migration by land and sea, and find out how animals forge unlikely partnerships to help each other in the wild. Simple haiku poems and fascinating facts give a powerful message of togetherness.

Here are a couple of examples of the haiku:

A vast migration.

Cranes take turns to lead their flock:

The feathered arrow.


The crocodile smiles.

Plover hops in for a snack,

Pecking the fangs clean. 


On each page there is also a small section of factual text which expands and explains the animal partnership. Cranes fly in flocks for thousands of miles and as each leader tires a new bird takes their place. Chamois live in herds and one member always keeps a look out for predators. The remora fish nibble parasites on the skin of sharks. The honey badger uses the song of honey guide bird to find a sweet treat which is them shared. Plover birds eat leftovers from inside the mouths of crocodiles. 


As you turn each page you will see the migrating cranes revealed through clever die cuts. Look closely at the cover at the top of this post and at the illustration above. 

Saturday, August 13, 2022

Counting Birds by Heidi EY Stemple illustrated by Clover Robin


I spied this book in the biography collection of a library I visit each week. It is one of the best children's libraries in Australia so I should not have been surprised to find this treasure. Counting Birds was published in 2018 and it celebrates the work of Frank Chapman. 

Publisher blurb: The remarkable true story of the very first Audubon Christmas Bird Count. Everyday kids learn how they can help protect bird species, near and far, with Counting Birds - the real-life story of bird counting and watching. What can you do to help endangered animals and make a positive change in our environment? Get counting! Counting Birds is a beautifully illustrated book that introduces kids to the idea of bird counts and bird watches. Along the way, they will learn about Frank Chapman, who used his bird knowledge and magazine Bird-Lore to found the first annual bird count. Bird counting helps professional researchers collect data, share expertise, and spread valuable information to help all kinds of birds around the world, from condors to hawks to kestrels and more. Counting Birds introduces kids to a whole feathered world that will fascinate and inspire them to get involved in conservation and become citizen scientists.


Here is a set of teaching notes to use with this book designed by the author. Here is an interview with Clover Robin where she shares her illustration process. 

I mentioned Clover Robin a couple of days ago. Take a look at her Instagram pages where you can get an idea of her art style. See inside her board book series - Nature Stories.


Clover Robin is a surface pattern designer and illustrator. She grew up in glorious Devon before training and graduating from Leeds College of Art and Design in 2007, followed by a Masters from Central Saint Martins. She delights in nature and all things botanical, inspired by a childhood of woodland walks and countryside rambles. Clover is currently based in Greenwich, London where all of her artwork is lovingly handcrafted and printed. Kids Best Books

About the author: Heidi Elisabet Yolen Stemple grew up in Hatfield, Massachusetts, and after 18 years of living elsewhere, she has returned. She has also returned to the family business—writing children’s books—after working as a probation/parole officer and a private investigator. Heidi is Jane Yolen’s daughter and sometimes writing partner. They’ve co-authored several books together, including their History Mystery series and Not All Princesses Dress in Pink. They also worked together on the nonfiction middle-grade Bad Girls: Sirens, Jezebels, Murderers, Thieves, and Other Female Villains and their most recent picture book, You Nest Here with Me illustrated by Melissa Sweet.  Heidi 'starred' in her mother's 1988 Caldecott-winning book, Owl MoonMurdoch Books

I now need to find these two books which also talk about the work of Audubon and also the annual bird count. You could also look here



Finally I just have to share three bird illustrations (not from Counting Birds) by Clover Robin. I have fallen in love with her work:



Tuesday, August 9, 2022

Illustrators to explore

 


Clover Robin (UK)

I spent some time today exploring the thirteen posts from Mile High Reading where Dylan Teut shares so many picture books that will be published (in the US) in 2022. He has lists like this for previous years too. If you are looking for picture books for preschool children and Kindergarten up to Year 2 (and in some cases beyond) these lists are a treasure trove. I noted lots of books I would like to read and selected these illustrators which I need to explore. Some of these might not be published until later this year (2022) and others are sadly probably way too expensive here in Australia:

Sibylle Delacroix (France)



Cinyee Chiu (USA originally from Taiwan)



Fiona Lee (USA)



Lauren Stringer (USA)




Rebecca Green (USA)


Sophie Gilmore (UK)



Gabrielle Grimard (Canada)



Nathalie Dion (Canada)



Patricia Metola (Spain)

Jessixa Bagley (USA)



Nicola Killen (UK)


Carmen Mok (Canada)


Milan Pavolvic (Canada)