Circle by Jeannie Baker
(Walker Books)
HC RRP 29.99
ISBN 9781406338010
Reviewed by Anastasia Gonis
Jeannie Baker is famous for the exquisite collages
used to illustrate her work. I always know that when I hold a book of hers,
there will be something special waiting for me between the covers. Here,
beginning ‘in a place where mud and sand become sea’, we follow the migratory
path of the bar-tailed godwit (Limosa
lapponica baueri).
The godwits are migratory waders that begin their
journey north from Australia, in March-April. In April-May, they stop in the
wetlands of the Yellow Sea to feed and rest. May-June sees them arrive in their
breeding ground in Alaska. In August the godwits are found along the coast of
the Alaskan Peninsula, fattening up for the journey south, as they have by now,
lost half of their body weight. They must leave before the Arctic winter sets
in. Their 11,000 kilometre journey is the longest unbroken journey of any
animal in the world.
In October-November, the godwits are in their
Australian and New Zealand feeding grounds. (See migration map at the back of
the book)
This book educates and creates awareness about, not
only the plight of godwits, but also other migrating shorebirds and creatures
that depend on places to rest and feed.
Unfortunately, many of these resting places are
disappearing due to reclamation and development. Circle brings us face-to face with the reality that everything is
inter-connected; how all that we do influences everything around us, extending
to the other side of the world.
Presented simply, but with a powerful underlying
environmental message, Jeannie Baker’s book will hopefully reach into our
consciousness and remind us of the constant threats to our planet. I hope it
will be widely used as a teaching tool to ignite children’s passion for
preserving the environment, as they become familiar with the term, the Circle
of Life.
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