Rosemary Mosco | |
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Born | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
Occupation | Author |
Alma mater | McGill University, UVM |
Genre | Popular science |
Subject | Biology, space, wonder |
Notable works |
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Website | |
rosemarymosco |
Rosemary Mosco is a cartoonist and writer working in science communication. She is best known for the science-and-nature comic Bird and Moon, and her graphic novels about nature. She has also published a number of books for children, including a best-selling travel guide. [1]
Mosco was raised in Ottawa, Ontario, where she would go hiking with her mom and then draw pictures of the wildlife they saw when they got back home. [2] She holds a bachelor's degree in anthropology from McGill University [3] and is a graduate of the Field Naturalist Program from the University of Vermont. [3] She worked in communication and marketing positions at nonprofits such as Mass Audubon [4] and the National Park Service. [3] She has birds as pets. [5]
Mosco's work has been featured in The Guardian and the Huffington Post , [6] [7] on the radio program Science Friday , [8] and by the Audubon Society. [9]
Her early webcomics include Wild Toronto [10] and (with Maris Wicks) Wild City Comics. [11] As of 2021, she writes the webcomic Bird and Moon. [12] A collection of her comics titled Birding Is My Favorite Video Game was published in 2018 as a book, and included on the ALA's 2019 list of Great Graphic Novels for Teens. [13] She published the graphic novels Solar Systems: Our Place In Space, and Expedition Backyard, aimed at middle school students.
In 2018, she co-authored The Atlas Obscura Explorer’s Guide for the World’s Most Adventurous Kid, an illustrated guide to curious places cataloged in Atlas Obscura. This became a New York Times bestseller. [14]
Mosco has published several nonfiction picture books since 2021, including Butterflies are Pretty…Gross! in 2021 [15] , Flowers are Pretty...Weird! in 2022 [16] , and There are No Ants in This Book in 2024.
In 2021, she published the illustrated nonfiction book A Pocket Guide to Pigeon Watching, [17] and in 2022, she published Why City Pigeons Are Worth Watching in the New York Times. [18]
In 2020, the PBS series NATURE featured Mosco in the video The Seriously Silly Science Cartoons Of Rosemary Mosco.
In 2021, Mosco won a Reuben Award from the National Cartoonists Society for Bird and Moon. [19]