The Green Bath. By Margaret
Mahy. Illustrated by Steven Kellogg. Arthur A. Levine/Scholastic. $16.99.
Coral Reefs. By Seymour
Simon. Harper. $17.99.
How much of an adventure can
a child have while taking a bath? Not much – unless he happens to be in The Green Bath. In this wonderful story
from the late Margaret Mahy (1936-2012), Sammy’s father brings the odd-looking,
claw-footed (or paw-footed) tub home from the flea market, just as the
next-door neighbor comes home with a sleek speedboat, leading to the neighbors’
boys teasing Sammy for his thoroughly uninteresting water-related object.
But…well, as Sammy’s dad installs the old bathtub, Sammy notices some strange
things about it, and readers – thanks to Steven Kellogg’s illustrations – see
even more than Sammy does, as the bath chuckles and smiles and scratches itself
and then closes its eyes (yes, it has eyes) when Sammy’s mother orders him into
the tub in preparation for a visit from his grandma. Sammy decides to have as
much of an adventure in the tub as possible, so he dons swimsuit, snorkel and
water wings and starts to imagine that the bath is jiggling and jumping and
leaping and bounding…. But is he imagining it? The bath rushes out
the house’s back door and zips all the way to the beach, where its entry into
the water causes a wave that swamps the boys from next door, who are there with
their father and his new boat. And suddenly Sammy is caught up in a whole
series of adventures: mermaids singing, a race with a sea serpent, and then an
encounter with pirates whose dastardly plans are foiled by Sammy, the bath and
the sea serpent acting together: “Sammy bewildered them with bubbles and baffled
them with soapsuds.” After a delightful wild-water ride back to shore, the bath
rushes back across the beach and all the way home, settling itself in place
just as Sammy’s mother and grandma show up at the bathroom door, putting an end
to all the imaginary fun. But is it
imaginary? Well, Sammy is wearing a pirate’s hat now, and happens to have a
treasure chest, which he spends some time unloading on the window ledge, and at
the very end of the book, on the
copyright page and inside back cover, we see Sammy taking his grandma to the
beach in the brightly smiling bathtub and introducing her to the sea serpent.
Real, unreal, or a little bit of both, The
Green Bath is completely charming and a quintessential case of good clean
fun for readers and the book’s characters alike.
The redoubtable Seymour
Simon turns his attention to some real-world water wonderfulness in Coral Reefs, using his usual formula for
a book about the world around us: compact, easy-to-read, fact-packed text combined
with beautiful photographs from a variety of sources. Starting with an
explanation that a coral reef is “a gigantic community of living things,” Simon
discusses and shows hard and soft corals, explains where coral reefs are found
and how exceptionally diverse the life is in and around them, talks about the
three main types of reefs (fringing, barrier and atolls), and then mentions
some reef denizens and how they live. Extreme closeups of a moray eel and
parrotfish are among the visual attractions here, along with the super-bright
colors for which reefs and reef fish are known – contrasted with, on one page,
a reef that has turned white and is dying, as Simon explains ways in which
reefs can be contaminated and otherwise threatened. Beautiful photos taking up
more than a full page conclude the book as Simon talks about people whose
livelihoods depend on the reefs and explains that reefs can be “thousands of
times larger than even the tallest skyscraper” – a truly amazing fact that
hopefully will make young readers even more interested in studying coral reefs
and finding out the importance of protecting them and the millions and millions
of creatures that depend on them. A short “Read More about It” list at the end
of the book – on the same page as an index and a useful glossary – is a fine
place to start getting more information after absorbing this latest of Simon’s
very impressive introductions to the natural world.
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