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After the Kill by Darrin Lunde
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After the Kill (edition 2011)

by Darrin P. Lunde, Catherine Stock (Illustrator)

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103800,658 (4.38)None
Member:yseasyreading
Title:After the Kill
Authors:Darrin P. Lunde
Other authors:Catherine Stock (Illustrator)
Info:Charlesbridge Pub Inc (2011), Paperback, 32 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:to read, richies pick

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After the Kill by Darrin Lunde

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Excellent, realistic portrait of predators, prey, and scavengers on the plains of East Africa. ( )
  Sullywriter | Apr 3, 2013 |
After the kill by Darrin Lunde, illustrated by Catherine Stock

The author follows a lioness’ kill from tracking to killing, eating, and the other predators that also share the kill; vultures, hyenas, jackals, and maggots. The text is simple but dramatic, not shying away from the violent interactions between prey and predator and the various animals’ fights over the carcass. Additional information about the various animals and their relationships is included in small captions on several pages.

This book is well-written and would have been a great stomach-turning read for school visits or older kids in a storytime, but Catherine Stock's gentle watercolors are NOT suited for this text! Created in pencil, watercolor and gouache, her paintings seem to be trying to soften the harsh life and death drama of the story, but only succeed in confusing it. The animals are blurry, without form or line and it’s difficult to follow the action in the swirling, messy artwork. Besides which, maggots and watercolor simple don’t go together.

Verdict: I’d like to see a similar title with photographs or more detailed, concrete drawings. I don’t recommend this one.

ISBN: 978-1570917431; Published July 2011 by Charlesbridge; Borrowed from the library
  JeanLittleLibrary | Jan 15, 2012 |
Richie's Picks: AFTER THE KILL by Darrin Lunde and Catherine Stock, ill., Charlesbridge, July 2011, 32p., ISBN: 978-1-57091-743-1

"It is early in the morning, and a hungry lioness is on the prowl. She sees a herd of zebras grazing in the distance. Mmmm -- zebra! Her mouth begins to water."

AFTER THE KILL is a picture book that stopped me in my tracks. Year after year, there are children's books set on the East Africa plain that look so posed, so static. This is the antithesis of those books. Page after page, this is a picture book that exudes vibrancy.

"The lioness crouches in the grass and creeps forward.
"One of the zebras seems weaker than the others, and she focuses on it. The zebra twitches its ears, but does not see her. The lioness creeps closer...closer...and then --"

AFTER THE KILL portrays the tension between co-existing species -- predators, scavengers, and prey -- as the zebra killed by the lioness becomes, in turn, a meal for white-backed vultures, spotted hyenas, golden jackals, male lions, small lion cubs, lappet-faced vultures, and meat-eating beetles.

Reading and re-reading this book that pulsates with life and power and timelessness, I wanted to know: How did this book come to feel so different from anything I've seen before? I decided to learn more about the author and the illustrator.

From a web page of questions and answers about the author, I found out that Darrin Lunde is a mammalogist who first went out seeking knowledge about taxidermy and organizing collection data when he was a middle school student on Staten Island. Aided by his hard work in college, he grew up to successfully land his childhood dream job: working as an explorer for the American Museum of Natural History which, for both him and me, was a magical place to visit as a child. Of working there, he wrote:

"Being part of the museum's unbroken chain of explorers is what means the most to me. The museum explorers before me who went out, suffered hardships, took risks, and discovered new things are my ultimate heroes. It's about more than adding nuggets of information to our vast storehouse of knowledge. It's about the struggle to reach unfamiliar territory and the hard work that goes into discovering new things. It's about continuing the tradition of exploration, and keeping the spirit of exploration alive."

Now he is working at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.

I discovered that illustrator Catherine Stock grew up in Stockholm, Paris, South Africa, New Orleans, and San Francisco. In colleges over three continents she studied art, education, communications, and design. Of her younger years and a failed career she writes:

"So then I decided to get my teaching certificate in London. What a shock! I couldn't control the tough young kids in London's East End at all, and later, the older students at the Loughton College of Further Education were so bored and unmotivated, only interested in snoggling with each other at the back of the class. Teaching suddenly became a matter of either discipline or entertainment. It was so different from Africa, where kids sometimes walk for hours every day to get to school."

On her website, you can find photos of Catherine hanging out with lionesses. Her illustrations for AFTER THE KILL are done in pencil, watercolor, and gouache.

"White-backed vultures are such clumsy fliers that they sometimes crash-land near a kill with a forward somersault. They have hooked tongues that keep other vultures from snatching slippery meat out of their mouths."

There are two texts in AFTER THE KILL. There is the narrative, as the various creatures either chase one another away or sneak in for a piece of the kill. And there is the smaller-sized additional information about the different species who make up the story -- a story that does not even begin to stand still until the final page, when we are left with the white, bleached skeleton of the zebra on the Serengeti Plain.

This is a significant work that is sure to inspire young artists, animal lovers, and ecologists.

Richie Partington, MLIS
Richie's Picks http://richiespicks.com
BudNotBuddy@aol.com
Moderator http://groups.yahoo.com/group/middle_school_lit/
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http://slisweb.sjsu.edu/people/faculty/partingtonr/partingtonr.php

FTC NOTICE: Richie receives free books from lots of publishers who hope he will Pick their books. You can figure that any review was written after reading and dog-earring a free copy received. Richie retains these review copies for his rereading pleasure and for use in his booktalks at schools and libraries. ( )
  richiespicks | Apr 25, 2011 |
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Learn all about food chains with examples of animals who live in the jungle.

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