Too Slow to See

by Kim Taylor

Published March 1989

Too Clever to See

by Kim Taylor

Published March 1989

Too Fast to See

by Kim Taylor

Published 1 March 1989
Part of a series, this book reveals what is too fast to see, such as the flash of colour of a darting animal. Through the juxtaposition of text and colour photographs which have been taken with special camera techniques the child is shown a world normally hidden from the human eye.

Hidden by Darkness

by Kim Taylor

Published 1 March 1990
Part of a series, this book reveals the world hidden by darkness such as the shine of a cat's eye on a moonlit night, moths that fly at night, shearwaters (fishing birds that fly at night), African tree hyraxes, bats, dew, spider's webs, owls. Through juxtaposition of text and colour photographs created with the use of special camera techniques children discover what they cannot see.

Hidden Underneath

by Kim Taylor

Published 1 March 1990
Part of a series, this book describing life hidden underneath fallen logs, bark, stones, sand, leaves, fur and feathers gives an insight into the unseen world of nature. Through the juxtaposition of text and colour photographs taken using special camera techniques, it describes a world normally hidden from the human eye.

Hidden Underwater

by Kim Taylor

Published 1 March 1990
Part of a series, this book reveals the unseen world hidden under water. Through the juxtaposition of text and colour photographs taken whilst using special camera techniques it describes the world at the bottom of a pond, amphibians, the development of a frog, coral reefs, sea anemones, fishes, squids and octupuses, lobsters and crabs, flying fish, water nymphs and sea horses - a world normally hidden from the human eye.

Too Small to See

by Kim Taylor

Published March 1989

Hidden Inside

by Kim Taylor

Published 1 March 1990
Part of a series, this book describing life hidden inside a log of wood, a pupa, a raindrop, a rock pool, an egg, a shell, a termite hill, a paper nest, a stone and a cat reveals the unseen world of nature. Through the juxtaposition of text and colour photographs taken using special camera techniques, it describes a world normally hidden from the human eye.