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[[Category:New Reviews|Animals and Wildlife]]
[[Category:Animals and Wildlife|*]] __NOTOC__<!-- Remove -->
{{newreview
|author=James Honeyborne and Mark Brownlow
|title=Blue Planet II
|rating=4.5
|genre=Animals and Wildlife
|summary=You may well remember when the sticking of a number '2' after a film title was suggesting something of prestige - that the first film had been so good it was fully justified to have something more. That has hardly been proven correct, but it has until recently almost been confined to cinema - you barely got a TV series worthy of a numbered sequel, and never in the world of non-fiction. If someone has made a nature series about, say, Alaska (and boy aren't there are a lot of those these days) and wants to make another, why she just makes another - nothing would justify the numeral. But some nature programmes do have the prestige, the energy and the heft to demand follow ups. And after five years in the making, the BBC's ''Blue Planet'' series has delivered a second helping.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1849909679</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author= Marianne Taylor
|summary=I'm on a mission: I want children - adults too - to spend a lot more time outside. I want them to have the benefits of fresh air, increasing their levels of vitamin D and the knowledge of what nature can offer them. I'd like the television, computers, mobile phones, video games and even books to be laid aside and attention given to what is available for free, but which - if we don't care for it - might not always be there. Fortunately the authors of ''Outside: A Guide to discovering Nature'' have the same ideas.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1847807690</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Caz Buckingham and Andrea Pinnington
|title=The Nature Explorer's Scrapbook
|rating=5
|genre=Animals and Wildlife
|summary=''An activity book, but not as you know it'' is what it says on the back cover - and I have to agree. Here at Bookbag we tend to avoid 'activity books' as they usually have soft covers, lots of stickers and they're the sort of thing you pick up at the supermarket checkout in the hope that it will buy you an hour or two's peace in the school holidays. ''The Nature Explorer's Handbook'' is a different beast altogether. It's part album in which you're going to collect and store your own finds, part explanation of the best practices of how you should go about this and part nature guide. It's a substantial hardback book with an elastic band to keep it shut - as it's really going to get quite bulky when your collection grows. Production values for the book are high - this really is something which will be treasured for years.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>190848926X</amazonuk>
}}

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