Boxer brings her storytelling prowess to bear on the animal world.
The author provides an easy-to-understand account of the cycle that brings some animals back to their birthplaces to breed, while also drawing parallels with human lives. Spread by spread, she describes egg laying, birth, and migration among salmon, puffins, bluefin tuna, and sea turtles. Mineker’s expressive illustrations depict the animals in appropriate landscapes. Most spreads also include an expectant human couple preparing for the birth of their baby. As the animals grow, so does the human infant. A young puffin “hobbles along the rocky cliff” before its first flight; the baby takes those first few tentative steps. As a baby bluefin tuna learns to swim fast to avoid orcas, the human child figures out how to balance on a bicycle. When the salmon begins its journey back home to mate and lay eggs, the child, now all grown up, is shown between two proud parents, wearing a graduation gown and displaying a diploma. Finally, after all four animals return home to lay eggs, the young adult comes back, holding a new baby as the gray-haired parents look on proudly. In the informative text, repetitive phrases detail each stage, enhancing the point that natal homing—animals’ ability to find their way back to their birthplace—is something many creatures share. One of the human parents and the child are brown-skinned; the other parent is lighter-skinned.
Readers will want to return to this gentle, effective account.
(author’s note, further information) (Informational picture book. 4-8)