June 2024 Stars & Big Picture
Starred titles are books of special distinction. See the archives for selections from previous months.
Aronson, Marc Bite by Bite: American History through Feasts, Foods, and Side Dishes; by Marc Aronson, et al; illus. by Toni D. Chambers. Atheneum, 2024 [176p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9781665935500 $17.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9781665935524 $10.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 5-9
Brunelle, Lynn Life After Whale: The Amazing Ecosystem of a Whale Fall; illus. by Jason Chin. Porter/Holiday House, 2024 [48p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9780823452286 $18.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9780823459254 $11.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 4-6
See this month’s Big Picture, below, for review.
Greenberg, Isabel Young Hag and the Witches’ Quest; written and illus. by Isabel Greenberg. Abrams Fanfare, 2024 [288p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9781419765117 $24.99
Paper ed. ISBN 9781419765124 $17.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 8-12
Lim, Aimee The Spindle of Fate. Feiwel, 2024 [304p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9781250886194 $17.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9781250886187 $9.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 5-9
Long, Loren The Yellow Bus; written and illus. by Loren Long. Roaring Brook, 2024 [48p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9781250903136 $19.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9781250368034 $11.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* 4-8 yrs
Mann, J. Albert Shift Happens: The History of Labor in the United States. HarperCollins, 2024 [416p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9780063273481 $21.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9780063273511 $12.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 9-12
Moore, Michael Boulware Freedom on the Sea: The True Story of the Civil War Hero Robert Smalls and His Daring Escape to Freedom; illus. by Bryan Collier. Godwin/Holt, 2024 [32p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9781250818355 $19.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 1-4
Sim, Tara We Shall Be Monsters. Paulsen/Penguin, 2024 [400p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9780593407424 $19.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9780593407431 $10.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 7-10
Sorell, Traci Being Home; illus. by Michaela Goade. Kokila, 2024 [32p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9781984816030 $18.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9781984816047 $10.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* 4-8 yrs
Tokuda-Hall, Maggie The Worst Ronin; illus. by Faith Schaffer. HarperAlley, 2024 [336p]
Trade ed. ISBN 9780358464945 $26.99
Paper ed. ISBN 9780358464938 $18.99
E-book ed. ISBN 9780358467175 $12.99
Reviewed from digital galleys R* Gr. 7-11
Life After Whale: The Amazing Ecosystem of a Whale Fall
By Lynn Brunelle; illus. by Jason Chin
As science-minded kids get further into elementary school, they’ll likely begin to understand that the “circle of life” is a lovely concept but a far less pretty process. Nature, after all, is nothing if not messy, and this month’s Big Picture offers an exploration of an only recently discovered natural phenomenon that is both majestic and grotesque: the whalefall, the death and decomposition of a whale. Brunelle’s engaging scientific text and Chin’s reliably magnificent artwork make a complicated and decades-long biological process easily accessible and endlessly fascinating.
The 400-pound heart of Brunelle’s 85-foot-long blue whale is on its last beats. After ninety-plus years on the move, traveling between northern icy waters and southern tropical seas, nourishing herself on krill, and producing offspring (along with other life events that are all evident in rings of earwax), this particular whale has made her final journey. But “the death of a whale awakens and ignites a cascade of new life,” a process that young readers get to follow here. It starts at the sea’s surface, where the whale’s bloated body is feasted upon by sharks and seabirds, and it ends all the way at the bottom of the sea, where hagfish, king crabs, and sea scuds show up for a tasty dinner. After the larger animals have gotten their fill, microscopic organisms—like the wonderfully named “bone-eating zombie worm”—and bacteria take their turn, stripping the bones. Some 150 years after the whale’s death, the bones release chemicals that rise in the water, feeding plankton and algae, which in turn feed krill, which in turn feed another whale, and thus the cycle continues.
With a seamless blend of scientific terminology and evocative prose, Brunelle reels her audience in, maximizing the inherent appeal of such an awe-inspiring (and sometimes stomach-churning) phenomenon with rich, cinematic descriptions. Readers first meet the whale as “the late afternoon sunlight slants through the rippled water overhead and streams down the skin on her back,” when she is gulping down “enough krill to fill a school bus.” Later, details have a delightful kind of “ick” factor, as rattail fish arrive with knifelike teeth, “spewing out chunks of whale flesh as they chew”; when the picked-over body releases hydrogen sulfide, it draws in various snails, mussels, and worms with “guts souped-up with their own sulfur-loving bacteria.” Plenty of such cool, gross tidbits of information will either delight or disgust young readers, but the vivid text also maintains an overall sequential structure, moving beyond simple trivia and compelling the narrative forward, centering the ongoing, relentless process of decay.
Chin’s delicate watercolor and gouache illustrations match the text’s balance of beauty and biology, easily conveying the majesty of the enormous creature while still tending to the nitty-gritty of the body’s breakdown. In one spread, the gas-filled corpse dominates the page, dwarfing even the feeding sharks, but the scene is quickly followed by the body falling through the ocean depths in a swan dive, a small thing in the sea’s all-encompassing enormity. Softly rounded panels allow for a time-lapse effect that sees the whale moving through its decaying stages, while close-ups and thumbnail sketches hone in on the various benefactors of the whale’s death. Luminous teals and turquoise of the surface give way to rich indigos and inky blacks of the sea’s bottom, first casting the whale in shadowy hues as it reaches its final resting place. Life and color return, however, as red crabs and pink hagfish tear away flesh and vibrant greens and oranges spread across the bones, a flurry of microscopic activity that transforms the skeleton into “one of the biggest ecosystems on the seafloor.”
Fans of the BBC’s Planet Earth will recognize the subtle reverence that ripples through the book, while readers already familiar with the phenomenon through Sewell’s brilliant picture book Whale Fall Café (BCCB 4/21) will happily dive deeper here. Highlights in a wealth of backmatter include a diagram of a blue whale’s body and further details on ecosystems, along with a note that the study of whalefalls is a relatively new science. Honest, informed, and enthusiastic, this does exactly what the best science books do—leave kids curious about what else is out there is to discover.
—Kate Quealy-Gainer, Editor
Cover illustration from Life After Whale: The Amazing Ecosystem of a Whale Fall by Lynn Brunelle, illustrated by Jason Chin. Illustration copyright © 2024 Jason Chin. Reproduced by permission of the publisher, Holiday House.