Explore the daily lives of children around the world through the
solstice--the longest day and night of the year.
Just two times each year - at an event called the solstice - Earth leans
closest to our home star, the Sun. Since ancient times, people have used
the Sun as a timekeeper. They knew that the length of daylight changes
in a regular way, and celebrated the solstice as a signal of changing
seasons. Solstice imparts scientific and cultural information using
the global experience of a solstice as its scientific core, and the
descriptions of children's lives at each latitude as the cultural
narrative. It is a browsable nonfiction appealing to informationally
minded thinkers aged 7-11. Enhancing the text and illustrations are
fascinating infographics about geography, hours of sunlight, sunrise and
sunset times, and how the Earth's tilt creates solstices and seasons. A
global event needs a global perspective: non-traditional families,
interesting facts that crop up in each account (e.g. in the Chinese
entry we learn that pandas need to play or else they get sad). Plus,
illustrators for each location represent their home countries with
authority and beauty.