See What a Seal Can Do

by Chris Butterworth (Author) Kate Nelms (Illustrator)

Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade
Follow a gray seal on a journey from sand to sea in an engaging, richly illustrated story with surefire kid appeal. On the shore, a seal looks like a slow, dozy creature that spends its time lazing around or flumping along the sand. But underwater, it's a different story. Splash! Seal dives deep, with a body just the right shape to shoot through the water and power down with his back flippers. He slips through a seaweed forest, and -- sensing a predator nearby -- dives even deeper to stay safe. Finally it's time to make a sudden twist and turn to catch his fishy dinner. Merging a lyrical narrative sprinkled with fascinating facts and aww-inspiring illustrations, here is one nature adventure that's hard to resist.Back matter includes an index.
Select format:
Hardcover
$14.99

Publishers Weekly

Seals might look as though they just laze about on the beach, but underwater, it's another story entirely, explains Butterworth in this intimate study of a gray seal as it moves from the shore to the sea depths: "Seal slips through the seaweed forest--big eyes searching the gloom. His sharp ears hear dolphins whistle and a ferryboat's engine chugging." Several small captions appear on most pages, offering incisive descriptions of seal characteristics and behavior. Debut illustrator Nelms's naturalistic mixed-media spreads feature a light-infused garden of sea grasses and coral; readers should find the seal, with his marbled gray skin and soulful, puppylike expression to be irresistible. Ages 5-9. (Aug.)

Copyright 2013 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Starred Review

K-Gr 2--A curious gray seal peers out from the cover, seeming to invite readers into its underwater world. Once inside, the book begins and ends with seals napping on the rocks. This sedentary behavior, the only one visible to earth-bound humans, gives these sea mammals a "lazy" reputation. In fact, as the illustrations go on to show, the seal is anything but. Once below the ocean's surface, the creature's streamlined body and adaptive features (which are described and explained) make it a master predator. The poetic text is full of alliteration, onomatopoeia, and vocabulary that will delight readers. ("A flump is a flop and a jump both together.") Sentences in smaller type act as captions and add further detail, as do the illustrations on the endpapers and the information on the verso of the title page. The beautifully colored, full-spread illustrations portray the seal's transformation from awkward land dweller to sinuous and powerful denizen of the deep. The below-water scenes masterfully evoke the murky ocean habitat and the singular seal's steep descent to the bottom. From the irresistible cover to the closing "super-swimming underwater wonder," the book will encourage readers to dive right in and see what a seal can do.--Carol S. Surges, formerly at Longfellow Middle School, Wauwatosa, WI

Copyright 2013 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

The beautifully colored, full-spread illustrations portray the seal's transformation from awkward land dweller to sinuous and powerful denizen of the deep. The below-water scenes masterfully evoke the murky ocean habitat and the singular seal's steep descent to the bottom. From the irresistible cover to the closing "super-swimming underwater wonder," the book will encourage readers to dive right in and see what a seal can do.
—School Library Journal (starred review)

Debut illustrator Nelms's naturalistic mixed-media spreads feature a light-infused garden of sea grasses and coral; readers should find the seal, with his marbled gray skin and soulful, puppylike expression to be irresistible.
—Publishers Weekly

[I]mpressively illustrated... Textured, realistic-looking mixed-media illustrations in aqua or sandy hues show the creature at home in both of its natural habitats, gracefully shooting through the water and "flumping" along on land. An author's note on the copyright page tells more about wild seals; illustrations of the eighteen types of "true seals" appear on the front and back endpapers.
—The Horn Book

'See What a Seal Can Do' is almost as good as swimming alongside a friendly seal, and you won't have to put on a wet suit.
—The New York Times Online
Chris Butterworth
Chris Butterworth is the author of Sea Horse, illustrated by John Lawrence; See What a Seal Can Do, illustrated by Kate Nelms; and How Did That Get in My Lunchbox? and the other titles in the Exploring the Everyday series, illustrated by Lucia Gaggiotti. She lives in Cornwall, England.

Charlotte Voake is the author-illustrator of Ginger, which was short-listed for the Kate Greenaway Medal; Ginger Finds a Home; and Hello Twins, a New York Times Book Review Best Illustrated Children's Book of the Year. She is also the illustrator of Charlotte Zolotow's Say It!, Steve Voake's Insect Detective, and Vivian French's Caterpillar, Caterpillar. Charlotte Voake lives in Surrey, England.
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9780763665746
Lexile Measure
710
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Candlewick Press (MA)
Publication date
August 06, 2013
Series
-
BISAC categories
JNF003140 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Animals | Mammals
JNF003150 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Animals | Marine Life
Library of Congress categories
Seals (Animals)

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