Nature

Maria Merian's artwork and close study of insects become a vivid portrait of careful looking and scientific artistry.
Children and trees are compared through a lyrical meditation on growth, rootedness, change, and interdependence.
A very old rock tells younger natural neighbors what he has witnessed across ages of geologic time.
Lyrical language shows how the natural world moves through walls, windows, habits, and bodies even when we think we are indoors.
Maria Merian's fascination with insects and metamorphosis becomes a vivid story about observation, art, and scientific wonder.
A child names the colors of her desert landscape in a bilingual celebration of place, observation, and belonging.
A tiny owl accidentally becomes part of Rockefeller Center's Christmas story and then begins a new chapter in the wild.
A lyrical cumulative text follows one worker bee through pollination, danger, labor, and return.
Detailed diagrams and friendly narration explain the life cycle and inner structures of flowering plants.
Three young friends head into the woods to observe, sketch, snack, and discover what careful hiking can hold.