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The Seal Garden. Cover Image E-book E-book

The Seal Garden.

Read, Nicholas. (Author). McAllister, Ian. (Added Author).

Summary: Where do harbor seals hide from storms and hungry orcas?

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781459820494
  • ISBN: 1459820495
  • ISBN: 9781459812680
  • ISBN: 1459812689
  • ISBN: 9781459812697
  • ISBN: 1459812697
  • ISBN: 9781459812673
  • ISBN: 1459812670
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource (18 pages).
  • Publisher: Victoria : Orca Book Publishers, 2018.

Content descriptions

General Note:
OverDrive (READ) format features optional read-along narration.
Source of Description Note:
Print version record.
Subject: Marine mammals -- British Columbia -- Pacific Coast -- Juvenile literature
Marine mammals -- British Columbia -- Great Bear Rainforest -- Juvenile literature
Coastal ecology -- Juvenile literature
Rain forest ecology -- Juvenile literature
Pacific Coast (B.C.) -- Juvenile literature
Great Bear Rainforest (B.C.) -- Juvenile literature
Coastal animals -- British Columbia
Seals (Animals) -- British Columbia
Killer whale -- British Columbia
Coastal ecology -- British Columbia
Great Bear Rainforest (B.C.)
Coastal ecology
Marine mammals
Rain forest ecology
British Columbia -- Great Bear Rainforest
British Columbia -- Pacific Coast
JUVENILE NONFICTION / Animals / Mammals
Genre: Electronic books.
Juvenile works.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2018 January #1
    With a storm coming on, forest animals take cover beneath giant cedar trees, while sea creatures head for "a magical place called a seal garden." After the storm passes, seals venture out, but a glimpse of orcas sends them back to the seal garden, where they wait for their predators' departure. Found in the Great Bear Sea off the west coast of Canada, "seal gardens" are areas where natural rock formations create underwater havens that can shelter hundreds of marine animals, protecting them from powerful waves and predators too large to enter. While the text offers interesting information, some sections could be more smoothly written. Still, the concept of a seal garden will be new to most viewers, and the illustrations will intrigue children and adults alike. McAllister's handsome photos, particularly those taken underwater, offer some unusual and almost otherworldly effects of light and color. An intriguing addition to the My Great Bear Rainforest series, which includes Wolf Island (2017) and A Bear's Life (2017). Grades 1-3. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2018 Fall
    Striking photographs of the Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia feature majestic landscapes and form a backdrop for Life's fact-based, year-in-the-life narrative following grizzly, black, and spirit bears. In Garden, equally dazzling up-close photographs under nearby Great Bear Sea accompany the pertinent text explaining why seals, otters, and sea lions take shelter in rocky seal gardens during storms. [Review covers these titles: A Bear's Life and The Seal Garden.] Copyright 2018 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2018 January #2
    Seals and sea lions shelter in a protected area of the Great Bear Sea, safe from stormy weather and prowling orcas.McAllister, a photographer with more than 20 years of experience in the temperate rainforest along Canada's Pacific coast, again teams up with Canadian journalist Read. This third in their series for younger readers uses McAllister's photographs to illustrate a slim storyline about seals, sea lions, and other creatures who take cover from a storm in rocky areas larger animals can't penetrate. Striking images, both above and under the water, show wide-eyed seals and the larger sea lions (but not the sea otters also mentioned). Later, when the storm is over, a group of orcas appears, circling around the entrance. In the clear, sunlit water, they can see the smaller mammals, but they can't reach them. Kelp and other underwater vegetation provide a leafy backdrop to the scene. After the orcas move on, a final spread looks up at a group of seals on a barnacle-covered rock, once again comfortable in their world. Able readers who want to know more about this underwater world will enjoy The Great Bear Sea (2013), by the same team. An attractive addition to settings where Wolf Island (2017) and A Bear's Life (2017) have been popular. (Informational picture book. 5-8) Copyright Kirkus 2018 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2018 January #4

    This third title in the My Great Bear Rainforest series features striking underwater photographs of seals, sea lions, and otters. A powerful storm has come to the Great Bear Sea, and the marine animals have retreated to their underwater sanctuary, where rocks protect them from larger predators. Filled with pink, red, yellow, and green seaweed, the seal garden is aptly named, and McAllister's photos of seals peering above the waterline and sea lions lounging on rocks are equally compelling. Read builds a sense of the lurking dangers awaiting seals outside the garden—orcas "patrol the garden like police"—and concludes by evoking a sense of the broader ecosystem that the series explores: "It's the way of life in the Great Bear Sea, where every animal, no matter how big or small, has a place to live and a role to play." Ages 5–8. (Mar.)

    Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2018 February

    K-Gr 3—Set in the misty Great Bear Rainforest on Gribbell Island in British Colombia, this book explores an atmospheric and surprising habitat. Northern elephant seals, harbor seals, sea lions, and sea and river otters hardly spend all day basking on the rocky shores, as one might imagine. McAllister's up-close images reveal the lively show that is life in a seal garden. This refuge is part-playground, part—napping room that provides shelter from the crashing waves and protection from the animals' main predator, the orca (they are too large to maneuver in the garden). Tension mounts as three orcas prowl the edge of the seal garden. But young readers will breathe a sigh of relief when the orcas are forced to move on with empty bellies to the next feeding ground. Playful images of seals abound. Even the coral, kelp, and stones are shot with care and somehow, even in a place with such abundant rainfall, McAllister manages to capture the sun's rays cutting through the water. The text is well laid out on the page; the white boxes break up the blue/green hues of the underwater environment. McAllister and Read's love for the wildlife of the Great Bear Rainforest is evident in their respect for their subjects. VERDICT Recommended for nature lovers and those that need encouragement to dip their toes into nonfiction.—Kristy Kilfoyle, Canterbury School, Fort Myers, FL

    Copyright 2018 School Library Journal.
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