The Secret Bay (Tilbury House Nature Book)

by Kimberly Ridley (Author) Rebekah Raye (Illustrator)

The Secret Bay (Tilbury House Nature Book)
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade
AWARDS: *Moonbeam Silver*, *John Burroughs Association Riverby 2016 Award*
Estuaries form where river meets sea and fresh water mixes with salt. Teeming with life, these places of salt marshes, mudflats, and tidal backwaters serve as nursery areas for oceangoing fish, migratory stopovers for shorebirds, and homes for an amazing diversity of snails, bivalves, fish, mammals, horseshoe crabs, fiddler and blue crabs, terrapin turtles, plankton, and many others, all of whom we meet in the pages of this delightful book.
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Hardcover
$17.95

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Kirkus Reviews

Facts about estuaries are accompanied by pages that often include rhymes and always include watercolor illustrations.

“You’ll find me right here, where river meets ocean / shining and muddy and always in motion. / Grass, mud, and water might be all that you see, / but don’t be fooled—there is much more to me!” Similar clumsy verses abound, complemented by prose paragraphs that explain and expand on the verse. Although many of the watercolors are colorful and well-executed, it is sometimes hard to read the text printed over the art—especially tiny names of flora and fauna. Some fascinating information is communicated through fairly sophisticated prose, as in the passage about how halophytes (salt-loving plants) have adapted to brackish water: “While pickleweed stores excess salt in compartments in its leaves, smooth cordgrass ‘spits out’ extra salt through special pores. Look closely at blades of smooth cordgrass, and you can see salt crystals.” This is followed by another, seemingly obligatory, pair of bad couplets—an unfortunate pattern in the book. In a similar vein, the glossary contains words already well-explained in the text, such as “plankton,” but fails to define the unexplained word “spawn.” The importance of preserving all players in the estuary ecosystem does come out clearly, and there are interesting tidbits of word derivation, as well as a lively section about how various animals avoid/escape predators.

Wade past the subpar poetry to find some good science. (list of estuarine animals and plants, author’s note) (Informational picture book. 7-11)

Publishers Weekly

Told from the perspective of an estuary, this rhyming story (a follow-up to The Secret Pool) explores the animal and plant life within this habitat. Among the subjects covered are horseshoe crabs, mummichogs (also known as mud minnows), "Midges, mosquitoes, and big greenhead flies," among many others. Although Ridley's verse can be a tad corny in places, and Raye's illustrations waver between polished and more roughly sketched, they combine to convey a marshland brimming with life: "Cordgrass is swishing all over my shores./ Pickleweed covers my soft, sandy floors." Detailed sidebars and extensive back matter provide a wealth of information about the creatures that make their home in tidal estuaries. Ages 6-11. (Oct.)

Copyright 2015 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

A charming introduction to one of the earth's most important ecosystems.—Sneed. B. Collard III, author of Firebirds, and A Platypus, Probably
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9780884484332
Lexile Measure
1180
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Tilbury House Publishers
Publication date
October 20, 2015
Series
Tilbury House Nature Book
BISAC categories
JNF051100 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Science & Nature | Environmental Science & Ecosystems
Library of Congress categories
Estuarine ecology
Estuaries
Moonbeam Children's Book Award
Silver Medal Winner 2015 - 2015

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