cover image The True and Lucky Life of a Turtle

The True and Lucky Life of a Turtle

Sy Montgomery, illus. by Matt Patterson. Clarion, $19.99 (40p) ISBN 978-0-06-332516-6

Resilience forms the backbone of this heartening new collaboration between Montgomery and Patterson (The Book of Turtles), which spotlights the real-life story of a snapping turtle named Fire Chief. From ping-pong-ball-size egg to quarter-size baby to full-grown adult who’s the weight of a lawn mower, the starring reptile is presented as the beneficiary of incredible lifelong luck. Science-oriented storytelling offers informed guesses about Fire Chief’s early years, leading up to his arrival at a rural fire station’s heart-shaped pond, where he’s eventually spotted sunning on a log. Time passes—underscoring the species’ incredible longevity—and the slow-moving animal’s luck comes to an end during an annual migration across a former country lane that’s been developed into a state highway. Luckily, people from the Turtle Rescue League arrive with a plan for rehabilitation, including a special wheelchair, and “human friends” eventually create a new, safer aquatic abode that requires no further road crossings—“What a lucky turtle!” The book’s artist, revealed to own the property on which Fire Chief lives, clearly has firsthand knowledge of the subject, relayed via intricate, hyper-realistic paintings that lend an appropriately documentary feel to this uplifting tale. Human background characters are portrayed with various skin tones. More about Fire Chief and resources conclude. Ages 4–8. (Sept.)