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Monday, May 11, 2026

Frog: A Story of Life on Earth, written by Isabel Thomas and illustrated by Daniel Egneus. Bloomsbury, Raincoast. 2026. $26.99 ages 8 and up

 


"But if frogs come from eggs, 

and eggs come from frogs, 

where did the first frog 
come from?
"

Beginning with the life cycle of the frog, and a child observing a frog's eggs in the pond visited, the author poses the question that will lead to sharing the history of the universe based on a frog's life. That story begins before frogs and everything else, including people, plants, Earth and stars. In fact, it begins with a very hot speck impossible to imagine. 

A BIG BANG happened when that speck expanded and created a universe. Small and energetic, 'there were no frogs yet'.  Going back billions of years, Ms. Thomas shares how stars and planets formed, followed by life ... but still no frogs. It took eight billion years to form the Sun and eight planets. The best of all of those was Earth, where life could develop because of its perfect atmosphere. 

The accuracy of the storytelling allows young children to understand complicated ideas of how life today came to be. Repeating the phrase 'but there were no frogs yet' keeps readers looking ahead to a time when there will be frogs. Ther progression is laid out clearly and enhanced by mixed-media illustrations that are stunning in their scope, filling spreads with scientific accuracy as stars explode, and the world moves toward what children know today. 

Text circles back to the origin story of amphibians: 'the ancestors of every living animal with four limbs, whether legs, or flippers, arms, or wings, including ... the very first frog!' Long after dinosaurs, frogs survived throughout the world. One exceptional spread shows many colorful species found around the world. As their ancestors, a frog's life cycle remains as it has always been. 

"Next time you see a tadpole, egg, or frog, 
marvel at this animal like any other, 
formed from stardust scattered through
space, created by chemistry, conditions, 
and chance.

Not just a frog, 
but the story of the universe, retold.
"

As they have done in two previous books, Moth (Bloomsbury, 2018) and Fox (Bloomsbury, 2021), this incredibly talented team uses an animal familiar to readers to examine a life cycle, and offer an accessible look at evolution in a way that is perfectly understandable for their target audience. Backmatter tells The Story of Everything in a double-page spread that offers context for the awesome and wondrous story of evolution. For those kids always wanting to know more, this is sure to be read again and again. 

"You are a whisper of the past.

You are a wonder of the universe."                                                                                  


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