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Creature Corridors

By Billie Rooney &  Anke Noack
Reviewed by Sandy Driessens
“We share the world with many creatures. Some move by day, others by night. In a town bustling with cars and buses, kangaroos thump, thump as if to say, ‘This road is too dangerous. How can we cross to the other side?’”
Australia’s precious native animals travel to find food, shelter and safe places to breed. Whether it is on land, in the sky or in water, because of human habitation and construction, the journey is more difficult and dangerous. However, across highways, through farming land and by waterways, wildlife corridors have been and continue to be built to help these animals reach safe havens.
In her debut work, Billie Rooney has written an educational story, semi-hidden as a warm children’s picture book. She skilfully parallels the animal and human habitat and how they interact. Her use of onomatopoeia brings the animals to life with the ‘snuffle, snuffle of platypus’ and the ‘scuttle, scuttle of red crabs’. Though not rhyming, her subtle use of alliteration provides a sense of rhythm to the animals and their habitat. She closes with a description of wildlife corridors, the corridors mentioned in the story and a glossary of terms, completing the educational component.
Award-winning illustrator, Anke Noack complements the tenderness of this story with images that typify the characteristics of specific animals, in colour, texture and facial expressions. The cover and endpapers are delightful, highlighting the stars of this book. She bleeds the human habitat into the natural habitat, in double page spreads, portraying the corridors with almost architectural detail whilst softening the images with native plants.
Produced by the CSIRO, this is a beautiful educational book that will appeal to young readers. Not only does it deal with major construction it also speaks to the importance of providing havens in our own back yards. It will engage them with their surroundings and also give them hope that we can share our world safely with many creatures. It should have a special place in homes, libraries, schools and early education centres.
CSIRO Publishing 2025
Billie Rooney
Anke Noack  

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