Fungarium – Welcome to the Museum
BEAUTIFUL RESOURCE
ROYAL BOTANIC GARDENS, KEW
This book was produced in consultation with plant and fungal experts at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew in London.
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ARE YOU A HOMESCHOOL FAMILY, WALDORF or SCIENCE EDUCATOR?
This is a gorgeous and inspirational book for chalkboard drawings and as a reference book for kids and their grown ups.  Absolutely fabulous for homeschool parents, educators, and as a reference book for kids studying many aspects of botany, such as fungi, lichen, moss, trees, palms, herbaceous plants, grasses, bromeliads and more. Includes many, many illustrations of seed types, growth progression, flower parts and so much more.Â
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DETAILS
- Fungarium
- Written by Esther Gaya and illustrated by Katie Scott.
- Published by Big Picture Press, April 6, 2021.
- Ages 8-12 is target age but adults will love this book too.
- 0.6″ H x 14.7″ L x 10.7″ W (2.34 lbs)Â 80 pages
- Hardcover
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PRAISE FORÂ FUNGARIUM
This rare and wondrous book will capture the imagination of fungi fans. You might be thinking that’s a fairly small demographic, but once kids see this graceful compilation that looks like a quaint nineteenth-century natural science tract–features detailed, labeled illustrations in vivid colors that pop off pages–and read about how fungi are actually closer to animals than plants, they’ll be hooked. . . The text is authoritative and informative, but the real attraction is the artwork. There are glorious spreads of ecosystems, and even the end papers are worth a look. . . This will make a handsome addition to STEM collections and should attract browsers and budding mycologists alike.
–Booklist (starred review)Â
Led by Gaya, a team of mycologists from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, offers an irresistible, oversized introduction to fungi. Dedicated to the “next generation of mycologists,” this well-designed handbook approximates a tour of a museum, or “fungarium,” complete with foil ticket for entry and four galleries–“Fungal Biology,” “Fungal Diversity,” “Fungal Interactions,” and “Fungi and Humans.” Stop-you-in-your-tracks biological illustrations colorfully depict spores, yeasts, molds, and mushrooms. . . Even the monochromatic endpapers are frameworthy. . . Kid-pleasing macabre facts abound. . . An immersive, exquisitely illustrated trip to the fungal kingdom.
–Kirkus Reviews (starred review)Â
This beautifully illustrated title is a detailed survey of all types of fungi. . . . The concept of a museum is highlighted in the incredible illustrations.
–School Library JournalÂ
The author’s direct language welcomes the reader into the captivating world of fungi. The readers will feel as if they are entering into a real museum as they are directed to tour each gallery in a wonderful reading experience. . . . Opposite the text are the sumptuous and colorful illustrations. The renderings are elegant, vivid, and exquisitely detailed. . . . The museum is dense with information about the fungal world, and this title represents a fascinating and beautiful work of art which explores the rarely-visited world of fungi.
–School Library ConnectionÂ
These woody mushrooms get a ‘gallery’ of their own in the gorgeous, museum-evoking pages of ‘Fungarium’. . . Illustrated by Katie Scott and written by Ester Gaya, with the help of a phalanx of specialists, ‘Fungarium’ presents a jaw-dropping vision of the multifarious and largely hidden world of organisms that are, we read, ‘more closely related to animals than they are to plants.’
–The Wall Street JournalÂ
[Katie Scott’s] illustrations are detailed and realistic, but they don’t feel like a text book. There’s a life and light to her illustrations, and that’s on full display in Fungarium. Ester Gaya tells fascinating stories and facts about a world of fungi, from the portobello you might find in the grocery store to the penicillin at the pharmacy.
–Book RiotÂ
The Welcome to the Museum series is part of a large series of books by Candlewick Press; they are sort of large format encyclopedias geared towards kids, but honestly adults might enjoy them even more. The artwork is beautiful and Old World, like something from the 19th century. . . . The full-page illustrations colorfully depict mushrooms and other fungi, as well as spores, hyphae, phylogenetic tree, etc. . . . This collection is a great introduction to early learners– showing what fungi are and just how vital they are to the world’s ecosystem–but would serve well as a coffee table book for advanced mycophiles.
–FUNGI Magazine
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TO LEARN MORE BOTANY, VISIT
- ArKive
- American Bryological and Lichenological Society
- Botanical Society of America
- Â Botanical Society of Britain
- British Bryological Society (mosses and liverworts)
- British Mycological Society (fungi)
- The Great Plant Escape for Kids
- Grow Wild (additional resources on YouTube)
- Junior Master GardenerÂ
- The Linnean Society
- World Flora Online
- Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
- Royal Horticultural Society
- The Science of Gardening for Kids
- The Woodland Trust
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR AND ILLUSTRATOR
Kathy Willis is the director of science at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew, England. She is also a professor of biodiversity in the zoology department at the University of Oxford and an adjunct biology professor at the University of Bergen. She has authored or co-authored more than one hundred scientific publications. This is her first book for younger readers.
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Katie Scott studied illustration at the University of Brighton before moving to London. She is inspired by the elaborate, detailed illustrations by Ernst Haeckel.