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Bushel and Peck Books, 2025 |
Happy Book Birthday to STUCK! The Story of La Brea Tar Pits, written by Joyce Uglow and illustrated by Valerya Milovanova.
From the dynamic cover to the murky-swirly endpapers, readers are immediately immersed in a dramatic and sinister place and time. It chronicles life in a more recent scientific period than the many versions of events surrounding the era of dinosaurs. This story focuses on ice-age survivors of that great extinction, the more recent land-, water-, and air- dwellers of 10,000- 50,000 years. Those earlier organisms, the ones from millions of years ago, transformed into oil reservoirs that, eventually, worked their way toward the surface. These seeps formed sticky asphalt pools lurking unseen just below shallow waters of a thin-scrim of spongy land. This is the story of that gooey trap.
Illustrations that swirl across the pages and suggest an omimous element reveal the passage of time as this underground ooze accumulated fossils into a bottom-of-page boneyard. Above that dark art are the lively habitats and dramatic movements of animals in flight or attack. Until, shockingly, they are stalled, trapped. Using lyrical minimal text that effectively incorporates science details, interactive animal dynamics of the past come alive. The words and lines either surge across the page, or settle into steady alignment when different approaches best serve the actions and abrupt pauses. The rhythmic and occasionally rhymed text encourage read-aloud that is both riveting and rollicking.
All life seeks water, so creatures (and flora) fell victim to that need, usually unaware of the danger lurking beneath the water’s surface. Specific creatures call to readers for empathy as a sloth struggles and is STUCK! That makes it easy prey for a saber tooth smiledon, whose attack also succumbs to the tar trap. Their riotous struggle entices a pack of dire wolves, and so on. Birds, insects, scavengers, and even the largest of mammals have stacked and sunk into the grip of prehistoric mire. Tectonic churn and geologic shifts disrupted the skeletons and bits within the ooze, but scientific analysis reconstructs the sequences and time periods of those lost lives.
This compelling story continues through the past century of first discovery of the pits and on into modern times where, now excavated and counted but still unstudied, are stored crates filled with fossil materials awaiting detailed examination. That’s not for lack of effort by the many scientists involved in the investigations. It's a matter of keeping up with the unearthed evidence. The tar pits themselves continue their bubbling processes in the heart of a sprawling urban civilization, Los Angeles, California. Even a parking lot has an active, well- marked asphalt seep, and it’s not a manmade one.
A recurring theme is the hope of survival, portrayed by a dragonfly appearing in early pages. A long-time descendent of that species reveals an escape that can be celebrated on the final double spread. Back matter provides clarity about the timing and processes across years, with examples of fossil types and further text/timeline. A full spread chart lists many examples of the countless species trapped by the tar, with a color key indicating their categorization from insects to mammals. The enticement of this fascinating slice of geologic history is undeniable, and the payoff does not disappoint.
Be sure to check back next week when I’ll be posting an interview with author JOYCE UGLOW. Her poetry appears in several collections, but this is her debut picture book release. She’ll share the back story for this remarkable book and its journey to publication.
Some interviews she has already done can be read HERE. And HERE.
For now, learn more about Joyce Uglow HERE.
STUCK! The Story of La Brea Tar Pits is officially launched today, and can be purchased at
BUSHEL & PECK BOOKS, HERE.
I urge you to get your hands on this new nonfiction picture book. You'll be STUCK, trapped, and happy to bring others along for the ride after reading this one!