Julia Rothman
Author of Nature Anatomy: The Curious Parts and Pieces of the Natural World
About the Author
Image credit: Julia Rothman in 2007. Photograph by Beanbag Amerika.
Works by Julia Rothman
Wildlife Anatomy: The Curious Lives & Features of Wild Animals around the World (2023) 201 copies, 1 review
Drawn In: A Peek into the Inspiring Sketchbooks of 44 Fine Artists, Illustrators, Graphic Designers, and Cartoonists (2011) — Contributor — 97 copies, 1 review
The Real Dada Mother Goose: A Treasury of Complete Nonsense (2022) — Illustrator — 74 copies, 7 reviews
Julia Rothman's Farm Anatomy Activity Book: Match-ups, Word Puzzles, Quizzes, Mazes, Projects, Secret Codes & Lots More (2024) 8 copies, 2 reviews
Julia Rothman's Nature Anatomy Activity Book: Match-Ups, Word Puzzles, Quizzes, Mazes, Projects, Secret Codes + Lots More (2023) 8 copies
Ocean Anatomy 4 copies
Julia Rothman's Ocean Anatomy Activity Book: Match-Ups, Word Puzzles, Quizzes, Mazes, Projects, Secret Codes + Lots More (2024) 3 copies, 1 review
More / Less : A List-Making Journal to Help You Figure Out What You Really Want in Life (2025) 1 copy
wildlife anatomy 1 copy
Associated Works
Clara: The (Mostly) True Story of the Rhinoceros Who Dazzled Kings, Inspired Artists, and Won the Hearts of Everyone . . . While She Ate Her Way Up and Down a Continent! (2016) — Letterer, Ornamentation, some editions — 77 copies, 3 reviews
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 20th c CE
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Rhode Island School of Design (BFA|Illustration)
- Places of residence
- Brooklyn, New York, USA
- Map Location
- USA
Members
Reviews
Jon Scieszka brings his signature humor and playfulness to nursery rhymes. Read Humpty Dumpty transformed by computer translation from one language to another and back to English. What might a book report on Jack Be Nimble mention? How about a Jabberwocky version of Old Mother Hubbard?
I love things that play with language and found this an absolutely delightful rewriting of classic nursery rhymes. There are notes at the end that explain various things used to transform them, whether it was show more Esperanto or Morse code or the military alphabet, and a little about the history of Mother Goose as well. show less
I love things that play with language and found this an absolutely delightful rewriting of classic nursery rhymes. There are notes at the end that explain various things used to transform them, whether it was show more Esperanto or Morse code or the military alphabet, and a little about the history of Mother Goose as well. show less
Even my 15 year-old daughter (non-bookworm—breaks my heart) picked this one up and said, "Mom, this book is neat!"
It's time for silliness and fun as six classical nursery rhymes are tossed through all sorts of language nonsense, flip-flops and more. First, the nursery rhyme is presented in its classical form. Then, everything from literary devices to word play to secret codes to languages...and just anything that words can go through hits these rhymes. The results are sometime humorous, show more while others make one think or even wonder how it makes sense...which it may not. For example, Humpty-Dumpty's rhyme meets Morse Code or Hey Diddle Diddle turns into a Haiku. Anything and everything is possible with these change-ups...and it's never the same thing twice.
The adaptations don't only bring interesting and silly results, but it does make readers see words in new ways. There is more educational value to this one than first meets the eye. Foreign languages join the mix, summaries, vowels, anagrams and much more. At the end of the book, each one of these types of 'twists' is explained, so the reader will learn more about Morse Code, similes, secret codes, puzzles, and everything else. Plus, it's fun.
The illustrations play between the text with gentler colors. These add just the right touch, where it is needed and let the text play stay on center stage. While this is a picture book, it's geared toward slightly older readers and will even make adults smile as they explore it with the younger audience.
I received a complimentary copy and enjoyed this one quite a bit. show less
It's time for silliness and fun as six classical nursery rhymes are tossed through all sorts of language nonsense, flip-flops and more. First, the nursery rhyme is presented in its classical form. Then, everything from literary devices to word play to secret codes to languages...and just anything that words can go through hits these rhymes. The results are sometime humorous, show more while others make one think or even wonder how it makes sense...which it may not. For example, Humpty-Dumpty's rhyme meets Morse Code or Hey Diddle Diddle turns into a Haiku. Anything and everything is possible with these change-ups...and it's never the same thing twice.
The adaptations don't only bring interesting and silly results, but it does make readers see words in new ways. There is more educational value to this one than first meets the eye. Foreign languages join the mix, summaries, vowels, anagrams and much more. At the end of the book, each one of these types of 'twists' is explained, so the reader will learn more about Morse Code, similes, secret codes, puzzles, and everything else. Plus, it's fun.
The illustrations play between the text with gentler colors. These add just the right touch, where it is needed and let the text play stay on center stage. While this is a picture book, it's geared toward slightly older readers and will even make adults smile as they explore it with the younger audience.
I received a complimentary copy and enjoyed this one quite a bit. show less
Julia Rothman's Ocean Anatomy Activity Book: Match-Ups, Word Puzzles, Quizzes, Mazes, Projects, Secret Codes + Lots More by Julia Rothman
What a fabulously fun activity book based on the ocean! There is so much to do in the book that even the most reluctant reader will get absorbed. Students from grades 2 and 3 and up will love the variety of things to do from mazes to drawing to word games to crafts, especially if they are intrigued by anything having to do with the ocean. There are several pages on how to draw ocean creatures and a page on how to use origami to make an angelfish. I was pleasantly surprised to see a page show more about lighthouses and students are encouraged to draw their own. Every time I turned the page there was another fun thing to do or create or find. There is reading involved but it is not a static read and I found it quite immersive. My students would have loved this and I will be recommending it to all of my student teachers and their mentors to add to their classroom libraries.
Thank you Storey Publishing and Net Galley for a complimentary copy. All opinions expressed are my own. show less
Thank you Storey Publishing and Net Galley for a complimentary copy. All opinions expressed are my own. show less
First sentence: Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall.
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.
All the King's horses, and all the King's men,
Cannot put Humpty together again.
So Dada Geese decided to help...
Premise/plot: How absurd can a collection of already slightly-absurd classic Mother Goose rhymes get? Extremely absurd in the hands of "Dada Geese" aka Jon Scieszka. He's no stranger to absurd twists-and-turns, the "fracturing" of the familiar.
Six classic rhymes get "fractured" or "spun." Each of the six get show more fractured six times. (So thirty-six new rhymes in all.)
These six include:
Humpty Dumpty
Jack Be Nimble,
Hey Diddle, Diddle
Old Mother Hubbard
Hickory, Dickory, Dock
Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star
My thoughts: This one is supposedly/allegedly inspired by "dadaism." (Kids probably won't know, won't care. Though I could be wrong. I certainly wouldn't have cared as a kid so long as I got a giggle or two from the book.) What I did appreciate as an adult reader was the back matter. *Some* of the new poems get a little extra explanation or footnote, if you will. (Like the morse code alphabet.)
The book is definitely odd/whimsical/absurd. That was the aim, and it succeeded.
I personally don't know *who* the perfect, target audience is. While the original Mother Goose or Real Mother Goose might have been for toddlers, preschoolers, the very young...this book is decidedly not for that young an audience.
For me, it was very hit or miss. I liked "Computer Translation Telephone" as a retelling of Humpty Dumpty. But Humpty Dumpty censored, well, I'm sure some will find it hilarious, but it wasn't me. show less
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall.
All the King's horses, and all the King's men,
Cannot put Humpty together again.
So Dada Geese decided to help...
Premise/plot: How absurd can a collection of already slightly-absurd classic Mother Goose rhymes get? Extremely absurd in the hands of "Dada Geese" aka Jon Scieszka. He's no stranger to absurd twists-and-turns, the "fracturing" of the familiar.
Six classic rhymes get "fractured" or "spun." Each of the six get show more fractured six times. (So thirty-six new rhymes in all.)
These six include:
Humpty Dumpty
Jack Be Nimble,
Hey Diddle, Diddle
Old Mother Hubbard
Hickory, Dickory, Dock
Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star
My thoughts: This one is supposedly/allegedly inspired by "dadaism." (Kids probably won't know, won't care. Though I could be wrong. I certainly wouldn't have cared as a kid so long as I got a giggle or two from the book.) What I did appreciate as an adult reader was the back matter. *Some* of the new poems get a little extra explanation or footnote, if you will. (Like the morse code alphabet.)
The book is definitely odd/whimsical/absurd. That was the aim, and it succeeded.
I personally don't know *who* the perfect, target audience is. While the original Mother Goose or Real Mother Goose might have been for toddlers, preschoolers, the very young...this book is decidedly not for that young an audience.
For me, it was very hit or miss. I liked "Computer Translation Telephone" as a retelling of Humpty Dumpty. But Humpty Dumpty censored, well, I'm sure some will find it hilarious, but it wasn't me. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 37
- Also by
- 3
- Members
- 4,947
- Popularity
- #5,077
- Rating
- 4.2
- Reviews
- 35
- ISBNs
- 62
- Languages
- 6





















