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Loggerhead turtle. Anecdotes. Juvenile literature.
Turtles. Anecdotes. Juvenile literature.
Loggerhead turtle. Anecdotes.
Turtles. Anecdotes.
This true story of a loggerhead turtle that has swum farther than any animal known to scientists is told by an American who has herself shattered countless records for long-distance swimming.Cox follows the turtle from her birth on an Australian beach to the moment she was caught in a net, then rescued by a Japanese fisherman (who named her Yoshi, meaning "good luck"). The fisherman treated her wounds, fed her squid, and eventually took her to the Two Oceans Aquarium in South Africa. Yoshi stayed there for 20 years, but the curator, behaviorists, and veterinarian decided to return her to the ocean, training her for endurance then releasing her with a tracking device. That is how the world knows Yoshi traversed 22,998 miles to lay eggs on the Australian shore where her life began. Cox's language is lovely, her descriptions helpful for young listeners. Imagining Yoshi's early life, Cox writes that the hatchling is "just the size of a smile." As the turtle grows, her bulk is compared to a cat, then a lion. In addition to luminous double-page spreads and delicate spot art, Jones employs stacked horizontal panels that cross the gutter to emphasize the passage of time as the swimmer progresses. Six blue circular vignettes depict the animal's struggle to breathe when she is snagged in the net. Cox's author's note explains that though she speculated about some of Yoshi's life, everything after her rescue is documented. Humans depicted are diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)A mesmerizing glimpse at the miracles of the natural world. (photo, map) (Informational picture book. 6-8)
ALA Booklist (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)A tiny loggerhead turtle emerges from her shell and immediately faces a daunting world. She manages to sneak past viligant foxes and hungry crabs and splashes into the sea, discovering a vast underwater scene teeming with incredible creatures. A tussle with a fishing net leaves her hopelessly tangled until a sympathetic fisherman plucks her from the ocean and nurses her back to health, ultimately landing her in a Cape Town aquarium to grow to adulthood. After many years, much debate, and lots of training, Yoshi is released back into the wild ocean and, to the astonishment of scientists tracking her, swims nearly 23,000 miles back to the Australian beach of her hatching, ready to lay eggs of her own and carry on the loggerhead legacy. Based on a true story (and penned by a renowned long-distance swimmer), this appealing oceanic adventure is equally educational and entertaining. The softly painted illustrations are rich and varied, sometimes sprawling gloriously across entire spreads and then zooming in to detailed vignettes. A brilliant tribute to a marvel of the natural world.
Horn Book (Tue Dec 03 00:00:00 CST 2024)When Yoshi, a real-life loggerhead turtle, hatches, she immediately crawls to the Indian Ocean and begins swimming out to sea. After five nomadic years, she becomes entangled in a fishing net (a sequence of events Jones depicts as a timeline of circles, each spotlighting her increasing distress). Unable to breathe, she begins an arduous journey to the surface, dramatically illustrated in a full-bleed, double-page watercolor spread showing Yoshi alone in the sea hauling a mass of fishing net behind her. A fisherman rescues her, eventually taking her to Cape Town's Two Oceans Aquarium, where she lives for twenty years. When Yoshi reaches sexual maturity, the aquarists initiate a program of reintroducing her into the wild; they finally do so, equipping her with a satellite tracker. To the scientists' surprise, she swims up the western coast of Africa, turns around, heads south, and returns to her heretofore unknown native beach in Australia, where she mates and deposits her eggs on the very shore where she originally hatched -- a 22,998-mile journey. There's much to discuss about the interplay of instinct, perseverance, and luck in this fine book. An author's note describes Cox's inspiration -- "I am intrigued by Yoshi's story because I too am a long-distance swimmer. I was the first person to swim around the rough waters surrounding the Cape of Good Hope, Africa" -- and separates fact from supposition; a suggested website documents Yoshi's release. Betty Carter
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)This true story of a loggerhead turtle that has swum farther than any animal known to scientists is told by an American who has herself shattered countless records for long-distance swimming.Cox follows the turtle from her birth on an Australian beach to the moment she was caught in a net, then rescued by a Japanese fisherman (who named her Yoshi, meaning "good luck"). The fisherman treated her wounds, fed her squid, and eventually took her to the Two Oceans Aquarium in South Africa. Yoshi stayed there for 20 years, but the curator, behaviorists, and veterinarian decided to return her to the ocean, training her for endurance then releasing her with a tracking device. That is how the world knows Yoshi traversed 22,998 miles to lay eggs on the Australian shore where her life began. Cox's language is lovely, her descriptions helpful for young listeners. Imagining Yoshi's early life, Cox writes that the hatchling is "just the size of a smile." As the turtle grows, her bulk is compared to a cat, then a lion. In addition to luminous double-page spreads and delicate spot art, Jones employs stacked horizontal panels that cross the gutter to emphasize the passage of time as the swimmer progresses. Six blue circular vignettes depict the animal's struggle to breathe when she is snagged in the net. Cox's author's note explains that though she speculated about some of Yoshi's life, everything after her rescue is documented. Humans depicted are diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)A mesmerizing glimpse at the miracles of the natural world. (photo, map) (Informational picture book. 6-8)
Kirkus Reviews
ALA Booklist (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Horn Book (Tue Dec 03 00:00:00 CST 2024)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
In this picture book that is both heartwarming and exciting, join Yoshi, a sea turtle, on her remarkable journey as she swims farther than any animal in recorded history--23,000 miles!--to return to the beach where she first hatched, to lay her own eggs.
Inside every loggerhead turtle is genius: the ability to find their first home, no matter how far away. Follow one, from her birth on a beach in Australia...to her trip across an ocean filled with sharks and seahorses and much more...to her rescue from a net by a fisherman, who names her Yoshi...to her rehabilitation at an aquarium...to her record-breaking swim across the Indian Ocean to the beach on which she hatched, to lay her eggs.
Written by Lynne Cox, also a record-breaking swimmer, here is the true story of a sea turtle who swam the longest distance of any animal in recorded history.