Making More

How Life Begins

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Buy on Amazon Buy on Waterstones
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 7 Mar 2023 | Archive Date 28 Feb 2023
W. W. Norton & Company | Norton Young Readers

Talking about this book? Use #MakingMore #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!


Description

This groundbreaking book from award-winner Katherine Roy explains and demystifies how everything from fish to mammals and plants to insects reproduce.

From fish to mammals and plants to insects, every organism on Earth must reproduce, and the survival of each species—and of life itself—depends on this and on the diversity it creates. In this groundbreaking book, Katherine Roy distills the science of reproduction into its simplest components: organisms must meet, merge their DNA, and grow new individuals; and she thoughtfully highlights the astonishing variety of this process with examples from across the natural world, from plants to insects to fish, birds, mammals, and more.

Lucid, informed, and illuminated by beautiful paintings, Making More weaves a story that seamlessly explains life’s most fundamental process, answers children’s questions, and provides an essential tool for parents, caregivers, and educators. 

About the Author: Katherine Roy is the award-winning author and illustrator of many science-based books for kids, including her Robert F. Sibert Award Honor Book Neighborhood Sharks, How to Be an Elephant, and Making More. She is also the illustrator of numerous other books, including Barb Rosenstock's Otis and Will Discover the Deep, Richard Ho's Red Rover, and Kirsten W. Larson's The Fire of Stars

This groundbreaking book from award-winner Katherine Roy explains and demystifies how everything from fish to mammals and plants to insects reproduce.

From fish to mammals and plants to insects...


Available Editions

EDITION Hardcover
ISBN 9781324015840
PRICE US$24.95 (USD)

Average rating from 27 members


Featured Reviews

This beautiful book talked about all kinds of reproduction in living things. It’s very appropriate for all ages and should be a part of every elementary science collection.

Was this review helpful?

This book, clearly a labor of love and hard work, explains reproduction (or as the author refers to it as "making more" ) in a way that is clear, informative, and even has touches of humor. The text is wide=ranging and clever and the illustrations are amazing (insightful, clear, informative, interesting....). It was a pleasure to read such a beautifully designed and thoughtful book. Katherine Roy's unique perspective shines through and captured my interest so that I kept reading without stop. This is a wonderful book to read and share with children and to have on hand for children to read and reread. They will then be able to savor the wonder of how we "make more." Bravo, Katherine Roy!

Was this review helpful?

I was immediately drawn to this book by the beautiful illustrations which continued throughout the pages. Making More is a wonderful but also scientific explanation of reproduction in our world. I enjoyed that it is told as a story, rather than just a book of facts. As I read it, I thought of my own son and how I think it would be the PERFECT book to introduce him to the concept of reproduction. Well done!

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Was this review helpful?

What a fantastic way to introduce kids to reproduction. It is so well explained and the illustrations are great. This would be perfect for a fifth grade classroom. My oldest daughter is only 7 but I would only hope this could be a resource for her when the time is right.

Was this review helpful?

I received a copy of this book via Netgalley Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.
Making More is a scientific and straight to the point book about reproduction in species nature and our homes. I learned how birds reproduce which I always wondered about, but never googled.

The images that accompany are simply beautiful. They elevate the book to another level. It would be the book I would use to explain the reproduction to a child or will use to explain bird reproduction to my friends

Was this review helpful?

Making More: How Life Begins by Katherine Roy (Norton Young Readers, March 2023) is a middle-grade nonfiction tome about animal reproduction, plant reproduction, and even fungi reproduction. In short, it will help every young reader gain a better insight into just how living things “make more” and continue the life cycle.

The first and last pages feel like a picture book: just a few words per page, with sweeping illustrations of a family, with an expectant mother, going for a walk in a park. This family provides a frame for learning about how all the living creatures they see also increase.

The explanatory sections of the book have a full-page illustration, then a few paragraphs of explanation, as well as a diagram to show just what is being discussed. Don’t read this picture book if you are squeamish about your children seeing pictures of animal sex and using proper terms for reproductive anatomy. Any middle-grade child reading this book will probably have questions answered about human intercourse as well, since the book provides descriptions using animal anatomy and obviously human anatomy has the same names as mammal anatomy.

I see Making More as an essential addition to nonfiction middle-grade shelf. Parents hesitant to talk about human reproduction may find it easier to approach from the “everything reproduces” perspective. I guess you can say that Making More helps ease the “birds and bees” discussion. (I feel like my kids and I didn’t really have awkward conversations, since we have tried to talk about it all since early childhood, but this book could only help!) I have to say that as an adult I learned things about how non-mammals reproduce, as well as more than I previously understood about plant reproduction. Now we just need to find a similar book in picture book format for younger children!

I received a digital copy of this book for review consideration.

Was this review helpful?

In MAKING MORE, Katherine Roy observes and researches the creatures in her yard and neighborhood, and then conveys with a pure sense of wonder the amazing facts of low life begins. Covering a wide range of species, she clearly and thoroughly explains reproduction, cleverly leaving readers to infer how a human family, subtly represented here in the beginning and end illustrations, gets from baby-bump to baby.

Parents and teachers who are nervous about approaching this topic will appreciate this book’s light touch and isn’t-science-incredible approach. Gorgeously illustrated and certain to become a classic.

Was this review helpful?

I LOVED this book! I have been looking for books to replace the really old ones in our elementary library. What a beauifully illustrated and organized book. I will definitely be purchasing this book for our library!

Was this review helpful?

First off, I have to say, these illustrations are absolutely gorgeous! My kids and I enjoy learning about nature and while we’ve always talked about reproduction it was great to have a book that we could delve a little deeper into the different ways that plants and animals reproduce since we are learning about Zoology. The Crash Course Zoology video 9 by Dr. Rae Wynn Grant goes well with this book. I love that this book gives the many examples of reproduction, since not all plants and animals reproduce in the same way. My daughter especially loved the illustrations and wanted to know how they were made. This book would be a great addition to any library!

Thank you NetGalley and W. W. Norton & Company for the opportunity to review this book prior to publication.

Was this review helpful?

Readers who liked this book also liked: