Kirkus Reviews
Glimpses of the life all around a seemingly deserted Antarctic iceberg."If this world looks empty, / look closer," Saxby suggests-going on to catalog in sonorous sentences the arrivals and departures of seals and penguins, of krill and terns, and other visitors as seasons turn. Meanwhile the small but stately glacier, newly calved at the start, changes shape as it floats, is slowly frozen into sea ice as winter comes and goes, and at last in spring tips over and vanishesâ¦as another berg calves in the "pale Antarctic dawn." The author closes with a note about how many of these seasonal patterns are being affected by climate change. Racklyeft more often goes for glassy rather than rough or stormy waters in her blue-tinged seascapes in order to make the glacier's underwater parts at least faintly visible, and above and below the surface her ice is translucent in all weathers, which lends a lyrical quality to each scene. Her renditions of marine life, particularly in an artificially populous but eye-filling gatefold, are done with reasonable fidelity. A distant ship in several scenes is the only sign of a human presence. (This book was reviewed digitally.)Despite the seasonal tilt, an evocative view of a timelessly ancient natural cycle. (glossary) (Informational picture book. 6-8)
Publishers Weekly
Poetic depictions of a newly calved iceberg across the seasons characterize Saxby’s witness to abundant Antarctic biodiversity. “If this world looks empty,/ look closer,” beckon early lines, which go on to name leopard seals, “fish-fat and sleek” emperor penguins, “clouds of krill,” terns, blue-eyed cormorants, and humpback whales, among others, as just some of the creatures that share the iceberg’s environment. Employing techniques including watercolor and collage to capture the icy landscape, Racklyeft’s illustrations help to enliven Saxby’s portrait of the Antarctic, and a gatefold immerses readers into what is a luminous underwater home for multitudes of marine animals. Interconnectedness is emphasized throughout (“Squid chase krill./ Birds chase squid./ Orca gather, linger, watch and seize./ Short-tailed shearwaters feast then return/ to their chicks”), and when the iceberg tips below velvety water, verse remarks on nature’s cyclical characteristics for a majestic, conservation-oriented conclusion about a place that “feels everything we do.” A note about polar regions and glossary conclude. Ages 3–6. (Sept.)