Book Descriptions
for The Humblebee Hunter by Deborah Hopkinson and Jen Corace
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Etty would much rather be outside where “raspberries glistened in the sun and birds brushed the air with song” than baking in the kitchen. When her father calls from the garden she eagerly joins him, and Etty and her siblings are soon engaged in one of his experiments, each child assigned to count how many times a bee visits a flower in a minute. “Ready … start!” Deborah Hopkinson’s fictionalized story is told from the point of view of Charles Darwin’s second daughter, Henrietta. Etty’s engagement with the experiment is drawn out over a series of pages marking the minute’s passing as she counts each blossom that her flour-dusted bee visits. Her focus is so intense that she feels like a bee herself. The sudden cry of “Stop!” marks the end of the minute and of Hopkinson’s story, and one can imagine the voices of Darwin’s children exploding with observations. An author’s note provides additional information about Darwin and his children, whom he often involved in his scientific inquiry. Jen Corace’s stylized illustrations capture Etty’s intense focus and a sense of the curiosity and warmth in the Darwin household. (Ages 5–9)
CCBC Choices 2011. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2011. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
On a beautiful day, the last thing Etty wants to do is sit inside baking honey cake. She’d much rather be outside exploring with her father, Charles Darwin.
Many are familiar with Darwin’s theory of evolution, but few know Darwin the family man. In writing The Humblebee Hunter, Deborah Hopkinson relied on research to create a lyrical fictional account of Charles Darwin at home with his children, discovering the wonders of their own back yard. Told from the perspective of Darwin's daughter Etty, the story portrays a very human side of one of the most revered figures in the history of science.
Many are familiar with Darwin’s theory of evolution, but few know Darwin the family man. In writing The Humblebee Hunter, Deborah Hopkinson relied on research to create a lyrical fictional account of Charles Darwin at home with his children, discovering the wonders of their own back yard. Told from the perspective of Darwin's daughter Etty, the story portrays a very human side of one of the most revered figures in the history of science.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.