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What's Smaller Than a Pygmy Shrew?


by Robert E. Wells

List Price: $6.95
Available: In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.
Sales Rank: 97748
Studio: Albert Whitman & Company
Binding: Paperback
Reading Level: Ages 4-8
Publication Date: December 31, 1969
Publisher: Albert Whitman & Company


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 4 reviews)

What's Smaller Than a Pygmy Shrew?  
This book is great for integrating literacy and math. It gets kids comparing and contrasting as well as using size to practice math concepts.
July 07, 2006

A must for the elementary school bookshelf  
I found this book when looking for supplemental materials for elementary school science units. This book is a good introduction to the concept of atoms. My sons (7 & 9) enjoyed it immensely; and it provided a good basis for a further discussion of what atoms and elements are.
March 21, 2003

What an incredible idea for a scientific children's book!  
I have had a very hard time finding high-quality children's books in the area of the sciences. (You know... books that are interesting and beautiful in addition to being educational). Thus, when I found this book I was so excited! My 8 yr old and 5 yr old boys were mesmerized by the story line... the author introduces a pygmy shrew that thinks he's small (at three inches long) and then progressively introduces smaller and smaller things (you're not so small, pygmy shrew!) until he delves into the world of one-celled animals and then molecules, atoms, and finally protons, neutrons, electrons and quarks!

Needless to say, this is an amazing introduction into one-celled animals, elements, molecules, protons/neutrons/electrons/quarks (and even the use of microscopes, both optical and electron)... and all delivered at the level of 5 yr old and 8 yr old boys (with very interesting and beautiful illustrations!) and above. I usually try to raid our library for books, but this book is very much worth owning, so as to be able to refresh your child's recollection of the material. I wish I could give it more than five stars!
February 09, 2003


Fun food for curious minds.  
From a pygmy shrew, the smallest mammal, to a ladybug, to an amoeba, to an atom, and even smaller (protons and neutrons, quarks...) this book takes a look at the miniature universe. It is a great book for kids with boundless curiosity, and it does not talk down to kids. The concepts are illustrated through comparisons; how small each thing is compared with something else. The illustrations are breezy and cartoon-ish.
August 23, 2000


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