Pippa's First Summer

by Catherine Badgley

Hardcover, 2005

Status

Available

Local notes

Fic Bad

Barcode

18

Collection

Publication

Ann Arbor Media Group (2005), Hardcover, 112 pages

Description

Pippa, a big brown bat, and her brother Click are born in the rafters of an old red barn. In this upper elementary reader, follow Pippa throughout her first summer. The story chronicles the hurdles and accomplishments of the young bat as she learns to communicate, to fly using echolocation, to become independent, and to survive difficult encounters with the world of people. Based on the real lives of big brown bats, the stories are accompanied by charming illustrations. The book provides an opportunity for readers to understand and appreciate these common nighttime neighbors.

Physical description

112 p.; 8.24 inches

User reviews

LibraryThing member karafrib
What is it like to be a young bat? That question receives answers in spades in Catherine Badgley’s book, Pippa’s First Summer. Pippa and her twin brother Click are born in a barn on a farm. They spend their first few weeks of life at their mother’s side and make friends with the young bats
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that live on the same rafter. Pippa and Click quickly learn how to fly using echolocation and discover which bugs are the tastiest. They also play games with their friends, and learn that even though the world is fun, it is also rife with dangers like owls, humans, and even horse hairs! Pippa’s first summer allows her to grow up and become a strong, brave bat.
Pippa’s First Summer is a departure from normal fiction books about animals, in that it is largely factual about the lives of big brown bats. For the most part, it is a naturalist coming of age story for bats in which Pippa and her brother and friends have many adventures and misadventures that real bats would have. Each chapter has a realistic illustration of one or more bats at its beginning, and often the illustration is of the situation that will occur in that chapter. It is interesting to learn about a bat’s activities, but at times the book drags and it seems overly long for what it actually covers. There is a part of the book in which Pippa’s brother is brutally killed by the babysitter of the human kids at the house on the farm. This scene was clearly intended to convince readers not to panic if a bat enters the house and to allow it an exit, but the scene is actually quite graphic and may disturb more sensitive readers. While this book is somewhat entertaining, it will not appeal to people who are not fans of bats. Best suited for grades 5 and up.
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Pages

112

Rating

(1 rating; 3)
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