Families who loved Who's Eating Who? by Elizabeth Gilbert Bedia often look for books with a similar feel. These 20 recommendations were selected for their similarity in style, theme, and reading level.
Reach for this book when your child starts asking the big, sometimes tough questions about how nature works and why animals eat one another. It is an ideal resource for transitioning a child's natural curiosity about animals into a foundational understanding of ecology and biological interdependence. By framing the predator and prey relationship as a vital connection rather than a scary event, the book helps children process the cycle of life with wonder rather than anxiety. This DK Super Planet guide uses vibrant infographics and hands-on experiments to explain food chains and ecosystems across various habitats. It focuses on the scientific vocabulary of energy transfer while emphasizing our responsibility to protect these delicate balances. Designed for children ages 7 to 9, it serves as both a curriculum-aligned science tool and a reassuring explanation of the natural world's complex harmony.