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Chameleons Are Cool: Read and Wonder
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Chameleons Are Cool: Read and Wonder Paperback - 2001

by Jenkins, Martin

  • Used

Who can resist a pocket-sized, bad-tempered, color-changing, swivel-eyed, snail-paced, long-tongued sharpshooter? Kids won't be able to after reading Martin Jenkins's amazing portrait of chameleons. With the eye of a scientist and the enthusiasm of a child, Martin Jenkins reveals the very cool facts about chameleons' life and anatomy. Did you know, for example, that most of a chameleon's eye is covered in skin, like the rest of its body? It sees through a tiny peephole in the middle! Sue Shields's vivid watercolor close-ups bring a chameleon's unique features into startling focus.

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Details

  • Title Chameleons Are Cool: Read and Wonder
  • Author Jenkins, Martin
  • Binding Paperback
  • Condition New
  • Pages 32
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Candlewick Press (MA)
  • Date 2001-05-01
  • Illustrated Yes
  • Features Illustrated
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 52GZZZ00LPBC_ns
  • ISBN 9780763611392 / 0763611395
  • Weight 0.36 lbs (0.16 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.89 x 9.09 x 0.17 in (25.12 x 23.09 x 0.43 cm)
  • Ages 05 to 08 years
  • Grade levels K - 3
  • Reading level 670
  • Library of Congress subjects Chameleons, Chameleons - Juvenile literature
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2006284606
  • Dewey Decimal Code 597.95

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From the publisher

Martin Jenkins first saw chameleons in Madagascar and, he says, "fell in love with them at first sight. I picked one up, ever so gently, and it promptly bit me on the thumb. I still think they are wonderful, but tend to leave them alone whenever I bump into them."


Sue Shields had to develop a new way of painting for Chameleons Are Cool, "to try to describe not only the chameleons‘ astonishing colors, but also the hint of the colors they can change into."

About the author

Martin Jenkins first saw chameleons in Madagascar and, he says, "fell in love with them at first sight. I picked one up, ever so gently, and it promptly bit me on the thumb. I still think they are wonderful, but tend to leave them alone whenever I bump into them."

Sue Shields had to develop a new way of painting for Chameleons Are Cool, "to try to describe not only the chameleons' astonishing colors, but also the hint of the colors they can change into."