Toes, Teeth, and TentaclesA Curious Counting Book
Review posted December 30, 2025.
Little, Brown and Company, 2025. 36 pages.
Review written November 18, 2025, from my own copy, sent to me by the publisher.
Starred Review
I've long been a big fan of the work of Steve Jenkins and his wife Robin Page, so I was saddened by his death in 2021. I'm glad that Robin Page is keeping his memory alive by creating new books with his art (and it's not clear how much she's contributed to the art side).
Steve Jenkins is the one who makes incredibly realistic images of animals using cut paper techniques. Then his books are the ever-popular books full of facts about animals. Yes, I'd already noticed that some of the images have already appeared in other books. In this case, I don't know how many of the images are new and how many are reused, but whatever the source, the result is delightful.
I tend to think that most animals have similar features to humans - two eyes, two ears, a nose, and a mouth. Two arms, two legs, five fingers and toes on each limb. Sure, I know about octopuses and spiders and insects, but there's a basic pattern, right?
Well, this book disrupts those ideas of mine. It's a counting book - of animal features.
We start with the one glowing spine on the angler fish, one sac in the nose of the hooded seal, one ear of the praying mantis. Then we look at the moray eel with two sets of jaws and the slow loris with two tongues. Then the squid with three hearts, the tuatara with three eyes, and the Jackson's chameleon with three horns.
And so it goes. For each number up to ten (which includes the rattlesnake's rattles and the sea pig's legs), we're given four or five examples. Then we're told about several animals with bigger numbers of things, like the twenty-two tentacles that ring the nose of the star-nosed mole and the 18,000 teeth of the giant African land snail. A chart at the back gives more details and facts about each animal featured.
Books of strange animal facts are always a hit with many kids, and this is a fun and surprising way to organize those facts.
