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Last of the Sandwalkers

door Jay Hosler

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When field scientist Lucy defies the law of her safe but authoritarian home on an oasis by leading a team of researchers into the desert to learn about the greater world, what she finds will change everything, beginning with the knowledge that beetles are not the only living creatures.
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Toon 5 van 5
READING THIS BOOK IS LIKE COMPLETING A LOVE CIRCUIT. Hopefully I'll get a chance to write more later. ( )
  LibroLindsay | Jun 18, 2021 |
People can believe whatever they want, and I respect that. I not trying to be mean, this topic should be mention and talk about.

As for the pro-science/antic-religion, this book was publishing in 2015. We have come a long in understanding how the world works. Christians have sign a letter saying that evolution and the existent of god can coexist.

“To reject this truth or to treat it as “one theory among others” is to deliberately embrace scientific ignorance…”
(and religion ignorance)

You can read more about it in this link:
my link text

The Last of the Sandwalkers can be a bit more enjoyable I love the science, but it can be better than this. There can be some more research actually a lot more instead of pointing your finger at a group of people due to what they think over a hundred years ago when the theory of evolution was first brought up.

It is 2018 now and thing have change humongous. Jay Hosler has a good story, I love all the facts about bugs. I sure kids will like this; the remarks are not too harsh for them to notes or care. This is a great book to teach kids what bis and straw man arguments look like.

People can write whatever they want, as for Scientist and any field that has research they are supposed to avoid bias. To have ignorance is the lowest form of thinking there is. I not putting myself higher than anyone. I'm a victim of ignorance. It common in this world to be that way.

There also a great website that explains how evolution and creation can go hand in hand:

https://biologos.org/ ( )
  KSnapdragon | Dec 23, 2020 |
Release Date: April 7, 2015
ARC received from First Second

This book was an awesome surprise! I loved the concept of using beetles to tell a story of scientific inquiry. I enjoyed the fictional elements of the traveling family of beetles, but I learned so much about insects, their anatomy, environment, predators, and more while following their adventures. It is an interesting and inspirational graphic novel. The artwork is deft and provocative and easily aids the learning experience while retaining the graphic novel feel.

This graphic novel is perfect for teachers and librarians looking for Common Core titles for middle and high school students, especially for reluctant readers. Non-fiction and fiction and perfectly combined in this book. Highly recommended for young scientists and adults who want to remember the importance of making discoveries. ( )
  clockwork_serenity | Jan 23, 2016 |
Release Date: April 7, 2015
ARC received from First Second

This book was an awesome surprise! I loved the concept of using beetles to tell a story of scientific inquiry. I enjoyed the fictional elements of the traveling family of beetles, but I learned so much about insects, their anatomy, environment, predators, and more while following their adventures. It is an interesting and inspirational graphic novel. The artwork is deft and provocative and easily aids the learning experience while retaining the graphic novel feel.

This graphic novel is perfect for teachers and librarians looking for Common Core titles for middle and high school students, especially for reluctant readers. Non-fiction and fiction and perfectly combined in this book. Highly recommended for young scientists and adults who want to remember the importance of making discoveries. ( )
  clockwork_serenity | Jan 23, 2016 |
A Heroine Like No Other!

(Full disclosure: I received a free copy of this book for review from the publisher.)

I find myself thinking about this hue-mon all of the time. I wonder if it ever thought about us?

Was there room in here for thoughts about beetles?

Did it ever wonder how some glow?

Or spray liquid fire?

Or dance on water?

Or drink fog?

Maybe someday, if a hue-mon reads this journal, it will help them appreciate all of the amazing little aliens living underfoot.


Lucy may "just" be a junior faculty member at Colepolis University - and a beetle, to boot - but she's about to change the way her people view the world. Reluctantly granted funding by the scientific ministry, Lucy's leading a team of five scientist-explorers out into the great unknown - the vast desert that lies beyond the oasis where their coconut tree grows. Colepolis is home, and all its beetle citizens know of the world - all its elite ruling class allows them to know - is contained within its borders. That is, until Lucy breaks with years of tradition and superstition, and insists on proving that the world is more complex and wonderful than they can possibly imagine.

At her side are the senior professors, the kindly Beatrice Bombardier and the scheming and reactionary Professor Owen, secret member of the Order of the Scarabi; the pun-loving Raef, who may or may not be part robot; large and lumbering Mossy, the group's protector; and, last but certainly not least, Ma'Dog, a storyteller long since exiled from Colepolis, who begrudgingly trades his expertise for safe passage back to his homeland. Together they must brave all sorts of threats - snakes, sandstorms, spiders, birds, bats, velvet worms, tree resin, and worst of all, backstabbing colleagues and religious fundamentalists - in order to return to Colepolis with news of all the strange and unusual creatures they found.

Jay Hosler's Last of the Sandwalkers might be the first graphic novel I've read that ends with both footnotes and a reference list - which speaks volumes about the book. Not only is it witty, wonderfully imaginative, and highly entertaining, but Hosler - a biology professor at Juniata College - educates as well. The story is populated by all manner of grotesque yet adorable insects; the drawings are both lovely and highly informative. There's even a field guide to the main characters! If Gil Grissom were a real person (and I was lucky enough to count him a friend), he'd totally find this stuffed in his stocking come Christmas.

(True story: before I realized that Professor Bombardier was a lady, I imagined her speaking in William Petersen's voice. Then I switched to William Petersen speaking in falsetto.)

Lucy is the sort of hero you want to root for: smart but not infallible, she's a clever girl who wants nothing more than see the world and suck down its knowledge like so much nectar. She's also kind and compassionate; some of my favorite scenes involve Lucy fretting over the amber beetle's well-being, or interacting with the emotionally fragile Raef. There's an especially refreshing plot line about consent, which I don't think was necessarily intended in a sexual way, but could certainly be used to teach kids about the importance of bodily consent as well.

While Last of the Sandwalkers is a great tool for getting kids interested in entomology (and teaching the importance of scientific inquiry in general), adults are sure to get a kick out of it as well. There are quite a few unexpected twists and turns that had me at the edge of my seat, and I stayed up well past my bedtime to finish. Secret societies, family drama, robots big and small, action and adventure, even a touch of romance - Last of the Sandwalkers has got it all. I won't lie; I even got a little teary-eyed at the end. (Page 292 - that's the spot.)

Buy it for: Little nerdlings; kids who like playing in the dirt; adults who carry spiders outside instead of squashing them outright - or are happy to just let them be.

http://www.easyvegan.info/2015/04/10/last-of-the-sandwalkers-by-jay-hosler/ ( )
  smiteme | Apr 2, 2015 |
Toon 5 van 5
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When field scientist Lucy defies the law of her safe but authoritarian home on an oasis by leading a team of researchers into the desert to learn about the greater world, what she finds will change everything, beginning with the knowledge that beetles are not the only living creatures.

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