Lightship

by Brian Floca (Author) Brian Floca (Illustrator)

Lightship
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade
You may never have
heard of a lightship.

Once, lightships
anchored on waters
across America,
on the oceans
and in the Great Lakes,
floating where lighthouses
could not be built.
Smaller than most ships,
but more steadfast, too,
they held their spots,
through calm and storm,
to guide sailors
toward safe waters.

In these pages
one lightship
and her crew (and cat)
again hold their place.
The crew goes
again from bow to stern,
from keel to mast,
to run their engines,
shine their lights,
and sound their horns.

They run the small ship
that guides the large ships.
They are the crew (and cat)
that work to make the ocean safe,
that hold their place,
so other ships can sail.

Come aboard!
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Publishers Weekly

Starred Review

With straightforward, compelling prose and crisply detailed narrative ink drawings, Floca ("The Racecar Alphabet") creates an engrossing portrayal of a now-vanished nautical practice (according to a closing author's note). "Here is a ship that holds her place," he begins, with a phrase that becomes the basis of an improvised refrain (e.g., "The lightship holds her one sure spot"). Thus he introduces the fictional lightship "Ambrose" and her nine-man crew. Floca follows the men and their marmalade cat mascot during the mundane tasks and sometimes-dramatic occurrences of daily life (a too-close-for-comfort encounter with a big tanker elicits a salty "#@*%&!" from the crew). In the final pages, a fog rolls in (as the cat creeps across the deck, for Carl Sandburg's fans), allowing the "Ambrose" to show off her "raison d'être". She flashes her beacon and sounds her horn (with a mighty ""beeooh"," at which the feline visibly shakes) to "mark the way" for other ships "past rocks and shoals, / past reefs and wrecks, / past danger." Youngsters who are mesmerized by "how things work" books will want to add this one to their shelves, but even landlubbers may well embrace this tribute to steadfast duty on the high seas. Ages 4-7. (Mar.)

Copyright 2007 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission

School Library Journal

Starred Review

K-Gr 2 Lightships were anchored where lighthouses could not be built. They protected our ocean harbors as well as points along the Great Lakes. The last one was decommissioned in 1983, so this fascinating picture book is a piece of nautical history. Floca's watercolor drawings depict daily life aboard one of these vessels, cooking, sleeping, working, all the while rolling with the rhythm of the waves. There were many hazards involved. Big ships came too close, anchors lost their mooring, and weather caused many problems. But when the fog rolled in, the lightship sprang into action. Lights flashed and horns sounded, allowing ship traffic to make it "through fog and night, past rocks and shoals, past reefs and wrecks, past danger." The drawings are very detailed. Some pages are collages of small scenes. Many are full spreads. The sailors' facial expressions are amusing to watch, and the resident cat appears on almost every page. The front and back endpapers show a cutaway view of one of the vessels. This fascinating, little-known slice of history should prove interesting to every child who loves big boats. - Ieva Bates, Ann Arbor District Library, MI

Copyright 2007 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission

Brian Floca
Brian Floca is the author and illustrator of the acclaimed picture books Locomotive, winner of the Caldecott Medal and a New York Times bestseller; Moonshot: The Flight of Apollo 11; and Lightship, each a Robert F. Sibert Honor Book. He is the illustrator of numerous additional books, including Avi's Poppy series. You can visit him online at BrianFloca.com.
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9781416924364
Lexile Measure
600
Guided Reading Level
14
Publisher
Atheneum Books
Publication date
March 20, 2007
Series
-
BISAC categories
JNF057020 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Transportation | Boats, Ships & Underwater Craft
Library of Congress categories
Lightships
Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Award
Honor Book 2008 - 2008
Capitol Choices: Noteworthy Books for Children and Teens
Recommended 2008 - 2008
Buckaroo Book Award
Nominee 2009 - 2010
Maryland Blue Crab Young Reader Award
Honor Book 2008 - 2008
Cybils
Winner 2007 - 2007

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