| CHARLESBRIDGE, 2025 |
For more than year, my writing personal projects have included work on two nonfiction texts related to global hunger. It's quite a heavy subject, and finding ways to make it both intelligible and accessible to young readers presents plenty of challenges. Even so, kids are eager to better understand their "up-close" worlds as well as big picture topics. In the case of JUST IN CASE: Saving Seeds in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault I have no doubt that readers of any age will be intrigued and excited at the concept and execution of this global project.
Author Megan Clendenan and illustrator Brittany Cicchese have captured the heart and heftiness of a highly technical and surprisingly simple program that could assure the survival of the human race. This one has stakes!
I was aware of this project, and had even read some science reports about it. Even so, this took me right into the depths of the story, and not simply as a good idea well done. Both the text and sprawling spread of the opening pages deliver readers to the barren snowscape of the near-North Pole. Quickly, though, we learn that this location was not only chosen for its low temperatures to preserve the seed samples, but also to remove the facility from most climate and geologic threats. With images and text, readers travel the globe and across time to note the universal necessity of seeds, and practices for their care and preservation. Occasional sidebars and text inserts build background on the significance and nearly magical power of seeds to assure life on our planet. Pages depicting the decisions involving the design, blasting, building, and operation of the Seed Vault are really intriguing.
It is made clear that the storehouse of seeds is not only for a potential or eventual apocalypse, but these seed reserves are available for active distribution during more localized destructive events. A full-circle effect is evoked as the closing spreads return readers to view of a child, a garden, and the role we can each play in preserving seeds and growing gardens. As impressive as the Svalbard Seed Vault is, this account is worthy of attention as a literary success. It works across many ages and curricula links, taking a broad and distant concept onto the picture book page. Young readers are fully centered in the story. It's a terrific nonfiction offering (including back matter with further details and resources) while enticing eyes and minds to connect with their personal roles in nature and science.
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