How can a sea exist without a shore? Dive into the mysterious, golden, floating rainforest of the Atlantic.
From Caldecott Honor-winning author Barb Rosenstock and Sibert Honor-winning illustrator Katherine Roy comes Sea Without a Shore: Life in the Sargasso. This nonfiction picture book is aimed at early readers, roughly in the 5-to-8-year-old range. The narrative creatively follows one small piece of sargassum seaweed as it drifts through the Atlantic Ocean. As it floats, the book reveals the complex ecosystem that forms around it. Readers are introduced to the entire food web, from microscopic creatures and crabs up to sea turtles and whales, all depending on this floating algae for life.
This book is a fantastic tool for bringing high-level science to students who might struggle with dense text. Its real strength is in the accessible delivery of its complex ecological content. The text uses very little idiomatic language, which is a huge plus for English learners. Instead, Barb Rosenstock uses simple, poetic sentences that create a clear, rhythmic flow. This simple structure is the perfect scaffold for introducing advanced scientific terms. Any potential confusion from this new vocabulary is handled by Katherine Roy’s illustrations. The artwork is integral to the text. Her detailed, watercolor cross-sections literally show students the hidden world inside the sargassum, making abstract food webs concrete and visible. For a student who is a visual learner or hesitant about reading, these illustrations provide the primary pathway to understanding the content. With starred reviews from both Kirkus and School Library Journal, this is an excellent choice for proving that nonfiction can be both beautiful and approachable. It successfully allows younger students or developing readers to engage with mature scientific concepts they might otherwise miss, building both their confidence and their content knowledge.