The Snail with the Right Heart
A True Story
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★ A Marginalian (formerly Brain Pickings) Best Children’s Book of 2021
★ A Spirituality & Practice Best Spiritual Book of 2021
Based on a real scientific event and inspired by a beloved real human in the author’s life, this is a story about science and the poetry of existence...
The Snail with the Right Heart is a story about time and chance, genetics and gender, love and death, evolution and infinity—concepts often too abstract for the human mind to fathom, often more accessible to the young imagination; concepts made fathomable in the concrete, finite life of one tiny, unusual creature dwelling in a pile of compost amid an English garden. Emerging from this singular life is a lyrical universal invitation not to mistake difference for defect and to welcome, across the accordion scales of time and space, diversity as the wellspring of the universe’s beauty and resilience.
This boldly illustrated book about evolution for children features a large gatefold that opens up to immerse readers in the story and will help kids understand that nature is all about differentiation and that being different is beautiful.
Praise for The Snail with the Right Heart
? A Kirkus Best Book of 2021: A Best Informational Picture Book ? ? A Spirituality & Practice Best Spiritual Book of 2021 ? "Of all the devices for communicating information, my favorite is the narrative: humanity’s psychological carry-on bag, in use since we huddled around our first fires. It can hold both factual information and ideas, real and imagined aspects of human experience. The Snail with the Right Heart tells the extraordinary true story of Jeremy, the lefty snail. Snails with left-spiraling shells are a one-in-a-million rarity, and the search for a mate for Jeremy became a British media sensation. Popova's lyrical retelling and Ping Zhu's simple, charming artwork add so much to an already marvelous story, introducing readers to the genetic significance of Jeremy's rare mutation and to the concept of deep time (and how life exists within it)."
The New York Times
STARRED REVIEW! ? "A poetic introduction to evolution, mutation, and the necessary reproduction to achieve both along the way. Author Popova takes readers on a journey through time, beginning with the emergence of single-celled organisms and ending on another one-in-a-million chance: a potential future snail with a particular, rare recessive gene. Gentle, lyrical text briefly outlines the evolution of modern life on Earth before introducing Jeremy, a common garden snail with a rare left-spiraling shell, found by chance by a human scientist who had recently listened to a snail researcher on the radio... Zhu's soft, opaque illustrations of life on Earth, prehistoric and modern, micro and macro, are sure to enchant readers of all ages. The oversized trim allows her to play up the snail's tininess in long perspectives, and close-ups are luscious; both enhance the narration's sense of playful awe. A story as charmingly mesmerizing as a silvery snail's trail on a summer morning."
Kirkus
Popova skillfully employs metaphor to connect Jeremy's story to the underlying science of evolution, as in presenting the explanation of why snails, who can reproduce on their own, prefer to seek a mate: 'because diversity is always lovelier than sameness, and because it makes communities stronger and better able to adapt to change.' ... Zhu's illustrations, filled with swirling expanses of color, brilliantly portray the concept of a recessive gene as a tiny but persistent snail silhouette inches across the pages and through geologic time.
The Horn Book
In a paean to the value of individual differences that is presented on a cosmic scale, Brain Pickings founder Popova relates the real-life story of Jeremy, a rare garden snail... Against a backdrop of biology, history, and genetics, Popova calls attention to differences of ability and the problem of the gender binary. In doing so, she elegantly underscores the desirability of genetic and other kinds of diversity, which is 'always lovelier than sameness' and makes communities 'stronger and better able to adapt to change.' Ping Zhu's art, however, turns a book about a humble snail into a riot of vibrant color, making for a celebration of the 'strange and lovely little snail with a left-coiling shell and a right heart' that is shot through with a strange loveliness of its very own.
Publishers Weekly
Maria Popova is a reader and a writer, and writes about what she reads on
Brain Pickings (brainpickings.org), which is included in the Library of
Congress permanent web archive of culturally valuable materials. She is the
author of Figuring, co-editor of
A Velocity of Being: Letters to a Young Reader, and the creator and host
of The Universe in Verse—an annual charitable celebration of science through
poetry at the interdisciplinary cultural center Pioneer Works in Brooklyn.
Ping Zhu’s illustrations are frequently seen in the New York Times and
other reputable publications, but also some questionable ones. She is a
graduate of ArtCenter and gave tours there as a work-study job. In 2013, she
won the ADC Young Guns award for being simultaneously young and talented.
Though she is no longer eligible for “30 Under 30” accolades, her goal in life
is to create work that will ideally age well like a fine wine. Or even an okay
wine. Ping’s children’s book debut,
The Strange Birds of Flannery O’Connor, A Life, published in June 2020
and was selected by the New York Times as a Best Children’s Book of
2020.
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