In their thirty-year lifetimes, Arctic Terns travel nearly 1.5 million miles, that's enough to fly to the Moon and back three times!
Each year they brave blistering winds, storms, rough seas, and airborne predators as they travel between the Earth's poles, chasing the summer. In The Longest Journey: An Arctic Tern's Migration, we follow one such bird as it spreads its wings and sets out to make its first globe-spanning trip with its flock.
Amy Hevron's brilliant, naturalistic artwork mimicking maps and nautical charts is supported by extensive research and paired with material at the back of the book explaining the science behind the life cycle of Arctic Terns.
A Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection
Named to the Delaware Diamonds Book List
Independent, opinionated, and stylish: essential multimedia publications for everyone who cares about children's and young adult literature.
#Nonfiction #ReviewoftheWeek THE LONGEST JOURNEY by @amyhevron (@NealPorterBooks/@HolidayHouseBks): "Hevron’s creative acrylic paintings + evocative, cool-toned sketches of the terns, sea, land, + sky are executed on wood + altered digitally" https://t.co/G4P6HgZWXV https://t.co/CDGY8MuDBX
Author of books for children. NEW: Fenway and the Loudmouth Bird out NOW from @penguinkids. Instagram: @victoriajcoe
Author Guest Post: “Fun Ways to Bring Animal Migration into the Classroom” by Amy Hevron, Author of The Longest Journey: An Artic Tern’s Migration https://t.co/CK0OO4S9QA via @UnleashReaders @NealPorterBooks #teachertwitter #teachingscience https://t.co/lgEFiaGtEz
"[An] awe-inspiring travelogue."--Publishers Weekly
"Young wildlife enthusiasts will thoroughly enjoy learning about the Arctic tern's annual trek in this recommended purchase for libraries with vast wildlife collections, especially those with a proclivity for literary nonfiction."--School Library Journal
"Hevron's creative acrylic paintings and evocative, cool-toned sketches of the terns, sea, land, and sky are executed on wood and altered digitally to take advantage of the wood-grain textures in backgrounds and negative spaces."--The Horn Book
"Well-deserved recognition for a migratory avian superstar."--Kirkus Reviews