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Turtle Tide: The Ways of Sea Turtles
 
 
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Turtle Tide: The Ways of Sea Turtles [Hardcover]

Stephen R. Swinburne (Author), Bruce Hiscock (Illustrator)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

7 and up2 and up
A mother turtle swims to shore. She digs a hole in a dune where she lays one hundred eggs. Following her instinct, she covers the eggs with sand and slowly makes her way back to sea. What happens next, from eggs to hatchlings, is one of the most extraordinary occurrences in nature. For the eggs provide food for other animals, and the eggs that survive produce hatchlings that, again, provide food for birds and crabs. Even those hatchlings that make it to the ocean face an uncertain future. Lyrical text and dramatic paintings give young readers an understanding of how turtles give birth and how the young fight for survival.
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 3-5–Simple, lyrical prose accompanies brilliant watercolors in this account of a nesting loggerhead turtle and her hatchlings. Swinburne describes the decimation of the eggs and the new hatchlings by raccoons, ghost crabs, a heron, a shark, and some gulls, until only one turtle is left to carry on to adulthood. Hiscock's sand- and sea-toned illustrations are eye-catching and match the text well. Two appended pages give more information on marine turtles and the dangers they face, and why we know so little about their far-ranging lives. Gail Gibbons's Sea Turtles (Holiday House, 1995) is a more general introduction, and Bianca Davies's handsome One Tiny Turtle (Candlewick, 2001) offers a glimpse at the possible maturing life of one of the ones that got away.–Patricia Manning, formerly at Eastchester Public Library, NY

From Booklist

Gr. 2-4, younger for reading aloud. A mother loggerhead crawls onto an Atlantic beach, lays a hundred eggs in a deep nest, and heaves her way back to the sea. Then the feast begins: raccoons, ghost crabs, sea birds, and fishy predators quickly reduce the clutch to a solitary hatchling. Swinburne points out in closing remarks that this level of depredation is normal, but human activities have so added to the sea turtle mortality rate that now all five main varieties are endangered. Rather than underscore the carnage, Hiscock focuses on the turtle mother's expressive face, the energy of her offspring, and the bright patterns of fur or feathers on the various predators. He closes with a view of the lone survivor, intrepidly paddling off into the wide, sunrise-lit sea. Children will come away appreciating the long odds that that little turtle has beaten; for accounts of the sea turtle's entire life cycle, back matter offers suggestions on several reading levels. John Peters
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 7 and up
  • Hardcover: 32 pages
  • Publisher: Boyds Mills Press (April 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1590780817
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590780817
  • Product Dimensions: 10.5 x 11.2 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #755,451 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

The Short Version

Steve was born in London, England. He holds a BA degree in Biology and English from Castleton State College in Vermont. He has worked as a ranger in a number of national parks and is the author of over 25 children's books. His extensive travels to faraway lands such as Africa and treks through Yellowstone have all influenced his book projects. Steve's first mid-grade novel, WIFF AND DIRTY GEORGE, will appear Spring 2010. He lives in Vermont with his wife Heather and a cat named Skittles.



The Long Version

My mother, Lily, had me at Marleyborne Hospital in London, England, at 11 o'clock in the morning on November 8, 1952. My father, William Swinburne, worked on trains delivering mail to faraway places all over England. I think that's where I get my love of trains. I was the middle kid--my brother, Peter was a year older, and my sister, Madeline, a year younger. We lived at 7 Wolsey Road in north London, a poor neighborhood of attached brick houses, narrow streets and endless chimneys poking the sky. During World War 2, a bomb from a German plane made a direct hit on the only pub on our street. One person was killed and the pub was rebuilt into a new pub called The Lady Mildmay.

My best friend on 7 Wolsey Road was a kid named George. Mom considered him scruffy and nasty. She called him Dirty George. I was dubbed Wiff. It seems neither of us cared much for soap and water. When we weren't mucking about the streets, we fought other neighborhood kids. Sometimes we'd chuck stones at each other. Once, a well-thrown stone split open my upper lip.

When I was almost 8, we moved from England to America. Mom, Peter, Madeline and I boarded the Queen Elizabeth in Southampton in southern England on April 20, 1960. We landed in New York City five days later. Southampton was the same port the Titanic departed from on April 10, 1912. They hoped to arrive in New York City on April 15, but the ship struck an iceberg at 11:40 p.m. on April 14, 1912 and sank almost 3 hours later.

I remember two things about our passage on the Queen Elizabeth: sitting in the swanky dining room being served by waiters in their crisp white uniforms. I looked down at the table setting and saw a 100 knives, forks and spoons. Which ones did I use first? The other memory that stands out was when we were docking in New York City. My mother held my sister in her arms and stood at the rail, leaning over, searching for my father along the wharf. When the ship's horn blasted behind us, my mother jumped nearly spilling my sister into New York harbor far below. What a welcome that would have been!

Age 8 to 17 was a blur of moving houses (my dad liked to switch houses every 2 years), new schools, new friends and fights with my brother and sister culminating in my parents divorce in 1970. All those years I took refuge in listening to The Beatles and writing in journals. I remember yanking the bed sheets over my head, flipping on a tiny flashlight and scratching words into 5-cent journal. I've kept journals and dairies all my life and think it's a great place to fall in love with words.

Growing up, I wanted to be an adventurer, a naturalist or marine biologist. Ever since I can remember, I've put words on paper and I feel so fortunate to make a living writing, exploring new places, learning about the amazing creatures we share this planet with.

I still would like to be an adventurer or marine biologist. One day. And I think a rock star would be kind of cool, too.

Steve holds a bachelor of arts degree in biology and English from Castleton State College, Vt. He has worked as ranger in a number of national parks.

He loves to travel and observe nature and wildlife. A safari in Africa, hiking in Scotland, monitoring sea turtles on a Georgia island, a winter trek through Yellowstone and watching shorebirds in New York have all led to book projects.

He lives in South Londonderry, Vermont, with his wife Heather and daughters Hayley and Devon.

When Steve is not writing and photographing children's books, he loves to sing and play Beatle songs on his Gibson guitar, garden, read, travel with his family and take pictures.

Steve's photography has appeared in magazines such as COUNTRY JOURNAL, VERMONT LIFE, GARDEN DESIGN, FAMILY FUN and HIGHLIGHTS FOR CHILDREN.


 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Why Turtles Are Endangered, September 29, 2008
This review is from: Turtle Tide: The Ways of Sea Turtles (Hardcover)
I used this book to culminate a unit on Sea Turtles with second grade. After learning all about their nesting, life expectancy. and turtle predators, it wasn't until I read this book to students that they really understood how few turtles make it to the sea, let alone to adulthood. The students actually gasped when they saw the picture of the first predator and the number of eggs taken. This book had a great impact on student understanding. The pictures were vivid and well chosen to demonstrate all the different predators turtles have from egg to hatchling. A teacher knows they have found a great book when there is total silence until the last page.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Turtle Enough for me, July 21, 2005
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This review is from: Turtle Tide: The Ways of Sea Turtles (Hardcover)
I thought this book was really great because I always loved turtles and the sad part was she laid 100 eggs and only one survived. I think that this turtle book gives alot of information about turtle eggs and baby turtles. The pictures were really great. I would recommend this book to everybody because it is a really great story and fun to read.
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