Publisher's Weekly Review
This addition to the Walk This World series explores biodiversity of 11 habitats, including the North American Sonoran desert, a Bornean swamp, the Congo, the Russian steppe, and the Himalayas. Brewster's grainy, earth-toned art shows dozens of animals in each spread, which Baker introduces in brief, evocative descriptions: in the Scottish Hebrides, "a flurry of feathers meet. Dolphins dive below the waves, while playful puffins dip their feet." Several animals appear on lift flaps, which offer additional details about each. A sloth is partially concealed behind a leafy palm: "The slow-moving sloth spends much of its life hanging upside down in the treetops. It grips onto the branches with its long, sharp claws." End pages feature a world map with animal icons, enabling readers to associate them with their geographical regions. A far-reaching overview of world ecosystems for animal-loving readers. Ages 5-8. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
Wild animals by the score pose in plain sight or hide beneath die-cut flaps in 12 natural habitats around the world.Walk This World, illustrated by Lotta Nieminen (2013), Brewster's gallery of broad land- and seascapes is free of human figures but teems with distinctive flora and fauna. His figures are occasionally stylized, but he depicts them with reasonable accuracy and shows them in natural, though seldom active poses. Baker's narrative is likewise a bit stodgy. She gives each locale a rhyming overview, muffing the final one slightly: "The shifting sands of the Australian desert / shimmer in the searing heat / and hidden far beneath the dunes / nocturnal creatures safely sleep." In addition, she offers perfunctory observations about one to four animals (or, rarely, plants) that are revealed by peeling up the small rectangular flaps on each free page: "The rare Asian arowana or dragon fish' swims in the deep pools"; "The ibis uses its long curved bill to search for food"; etc. A map at the end retraces the overall route and provides a general sense of each scene's location. Even though some creatures are very small or too dimly lit to make out, and many others are unidentified, at least the art will give animal lovers plenty to pore over.A patchy production, visually absorbing at its best but hampered by a banal and unsystematic text. (Informational pop-up picture book. 7-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.