
Biomimicry
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Discover how bats led to the development of radar, whales inspired the pacemaker, and the lotus flower may help us produce indestructible clothing. "Biomimicry" comes from the Greek "bio" (life) and "mimesis" (imitation)." Here are various and amazing ways that nature inspires us to create cool inventions in science and medicine, clothing design, and architecture. From the fireflies that showed inventors how LEDs could give off more light to the burdock plant that inspired velcro to the high speed trains of Japan that take the form of a kingfisher's sleek, aerodynamic head, there are innumerable ways that we can create smarter, better, safer inventions by observing the natural world. Author Seraphine Menu and illustrator Emmanuelle Walker also gently explain that our extraordinary, diverse, and awe-inspiring world is like a carefully calibrated machine and its fragile balance must be treated with extreme care and respect. "Go outside," they say, "observe, compare, and maybe some day you'll be the next person to be struck by a great idea."
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Emmanuelle Walker is a Swiss/Canadian illustrator with a 2D animation direction and design background. She is the illustrator of Dogs in Cars and Beautiful Birds, which was a bestseller and won the prestigious Chen Bochui International Children's Literature awards for best picture book and received an honorary mention for the Opera Prima at the Bologna Book Fair in 2016. She also illustrated Beautiful Birds Coloring Book (Flying Eye/Nobrow). Walker lives in London.
Alyson Waters translates modern and contemporary literature from the French. In addition to over a dozen books for adults, she has translated four books for children. Her translation of Eric Chevillard's Prehistoric Times won the French-American Foundation/Florence Gould prize for best translation from the French in 2013. Her most recent translation is Jean Giono's A King Alone (New York Review Books, 2019). She teaches literary translation in the French Department of Yale University, is the managing editor of Yale French Studies, and lives in Brooklyn, New York.
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