Nature is full of shapes. You can find a circle in a flower, a rectangle in a rock, and a triangle in a faraway mountain. Look around. What shapes can you find?
Nature is full of shapes. You can find a circle in a flower, a rectangle in a rock, and a triangle in a faraway mountain. Look around. What shapes can you find?
Nature is full of shapes. You can find a circle in a flower, a rectangle in a rock, and a triangle in a faraway mountain. Look around. What shapes can you find?
Nature is full of shapes. You can find a circle in a flower, a rectangle in a rock, and a triangle in a faraway mountain. Look around. What shapes can you find?
Nature is full of shapes. You can find a circle in a flower, a rectangle in a rock, and a triangle in a faraway mountain. Look around. What shapes can you find?
Melissa Stewart has written more than 200 science books for children, and is a recipient of the Sibert Honor for excellence in nonfiction. In her free time, she and her husband, Gerard, like to hike near their home in Massachusetts, where they’re always on the lookout for shapes in nature.
Reviews
A colorful, exciting way to open young children’s eyes and minds to the shapes all around them. - Kirkus
Young readers will enjoy finding the shapes in a variety of hunts. Reminiscent of Jean Marzollo’s “I Spy” books, these have short rhyming text to guide children through the pages. —School Library Journal Review
Nature is full of shapes. You can find a circle in a flower, a rectangle in a rock, and a triangle in a faraway mountain. Look around. What shapes can you find?
Nature is full of shapes. You can find a circle in a flower, a rectangle in a rock, and a triangle in a faraway mountain. Look around. What shapes can you find?
Nature is full of shapes. You can find a circle in a flower, a rectangle in a rock, and a triangle in a faraway mountain. Look around. What shapes can you find?
Author & Illustrator
Melissa Stewart
Melissa Stewart has written more than 200 science books for children, and is a recipient of the Sibert Honor for excellence in nonfiction. In her free time, she and her husband, Gerard, like to hike near their home in Massachusetts, where they’re always on the lookout for shapes in nature.
Reviews
A colorful, exciting way to open young children’s eyes and minds to the shapes all around them. - Kirkus
Young readers will enjoy finding the shapes in a variety of hunts. Reminiscent of Jean Marzollo’s “I Spy” books, these have short rhyming text to guide children through the pages. —School Library Journal Review