Interview with a Tiger (and other clawed beasts) is a fun book that gets up close with 10 fierce and furry beasts (including tigers) as they step up to the mic, and share their habits, behaviour, likes/dislikes, favourite foods and more.
It also features ‘interviews’ with a wolf, honey badger, giant armadillo, lion, giant anteater, jaguar, snow leopard, polar bear and three-toed sloth. Plus tips on how to help endangered species.
Interview with a Kangaroo (and other marsupials)
Interview with a Kangaroo (and other marsupials) looks at animals who carry their young in pouches. Features interviews with:
- A kangaroo
- A koala
- A Virginia opossum
- A Tasmanian devil
- A numbat
- A bandicoot
- A sugar glider
- A quokka
- A spotted cuscus
Interview with a Shark (and other ocean giants)
Interview with a Shark (and other ocean giants) gets up close with 10 extraordinary marine creatures, as they step up to the mic to share their habits, behaviours, likes/dislikes and favourite foods. The book features ‘interviews’ with:
- A great white shark
- A blue whale
- An orca (killer whale)
- A sunfish
- A giant squid
- A narwhal
- A manta ray
- An octopus
- A conger eel
- An angler fish
Interview with a Panda (& more endangered species)
Interview with a Panda (and other endangered animals) educates children on how to help, with interviews with:
- A giant panda
- A green turtle
- A black rhino
- A flying fox
- A Sumatran elephant
- A Cuban crocodile
- A tiger chameleon
- A kakapo (New Zealand owl parrot)
- A Western Nimba Toad
We have many endangered species both in England (hedgehogs, dormice and water voles are a few) along with many others worldwide. The IUCN Red List is the place to find current statistics, and learn how to help. The shocking news is that there are 44,000 threatened species (almost a third of all of them). The list ranges from slightly concerned to extinct.
Readers of National Geographic will remember the heartbreaking photo a few years ago of the carer of the last male white rhino being caressed, just before died. With just two females left, Sudan’s death left the species near extinct (IVF treatment with a southern white rhino is now trying to help).
About the Author
Andy Seed is a children’s book author, who lives near wild boar in a forest in Gloucestershire. He loves to write fun books for children that are ‘a bit giggly’. He has won over 100 caption competitions, and once appeared as a contestant on the TV series Bullseye. His team lost (‘look at what you could have won’) to two Elvis impersonators!