FICTION

Elizabeth, Queen of the Seas

illus. by Brian Floca. 48p. websites. Random/Schwartz & Wade. May 2014. Tr $17.99. ISBN 9780375858888; lib. ed. $20.99. ISBN 9780375958885; ebk. $10.99. ISBN 9780375987694. LC 2011023586.
COPY ISBN
RedReviewStarK-Gr 3—Cox opens this fact-based story on just the right note: "There was once a lovely elephant seal who lived in the city." A boy named Michael is fascinated with the marine mammal that chooses to live by or swim in the tranquil Avon River that passes by Christchurch's botanical garden. When the seal, named after the Queen of England, narrowly avoids death after relaxing on a warm city street, residents volunteer to move her to an elephant seal colony. After she makes her way back, they try two additional times to relocate her. Finally, knowing that city dwellers were secretly happy to see Elizabeth return to Christchurch, the city erects a "Slow. Elephant Seal Crossing" sign near her favorite sleeping place. The author generally avoids anthropomorphizing Elizabeth's motivation for continuing to return to the city by suggesting a few possibilities for readers to consider. Some basic facts about these huge marine mammals are woven into the highly approachable narrative, and a few paragraphs at the conclusion further explore more about their habits. A black-and-white photo of the famous seal sleeping on the pavement closes the book and reinforces its factual nature. Floca's gentle pen-and-ink and watercolor paintings perfectly capture Elizabeth's watery world. Double-page spreads nicely complement pages that feature smaller vignettes echoing the seal's rounded body. Especially effective is a page where Michael, who after nearly three months without his friend, wishes on the stars reflected in the river's water; the page turn reveals the seal's head poking through radiating rings of water while the boy shouts, "Welcome home, Elizabeth!" Children are likely to request multiple readings of this compelling told and lovingly illustrated true story.—Ellen Fader, formerly at Multnomah County Library, Portland, OR
Twelve-hundred-pound elephant seal Elizabeth preferred the Avon River in Christchurch, New Zealand, to the ocean. She sometimes hauled herself up onto the city's roads and obstructed traffic, prompting an "elephant seal crossing" road sign. Cox creates an appealing narrative for this intriguing, if problematic, individual. Floca uses a spare but agile pen to convey Elizabeth's persistence; spacious sweeps of watercolor evoke sea and sky.
Renowned long-distance swimmer Cox here celebrates a swimmer of a different species: a twelve-hundred-pound elephant seal that preferred the warm banks of the Avon River in Christchurch, New Zealand, to the ocean's cold saltwater and the company of her fellow seals on the beach. Unfortunately, "Elizabeth" (named for the queen of England) sometimes hauled herself up onto the city's roads and obstructed traffic; accordingly, she was repeatedly relocated, only to return. Her third re­appearance, after several months and from hundreds of miles away, prompted a welcome new strategy: an "elephant seal crossing" road sign. Sticking to the facts as related to her by a couple of children, Cox ties her appealing narrative together with their affection for this intriguing, if problematic, individual. Details of elephant seal behavior are nicely amplified in an afterword, which includes a photo of the real Elizabeth, drowsing streetside. Floca limns creatures and people with a spare but agile pen, nicely conveying Elizabeth's contentment and placid persistence; spacious sweeps of watercolor evoke sea, sky, and Christchurch's inviting, well-peopled park. A good story, a beautiful book, and an excellent introduction to this massive species. joanna rudge long

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