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The Last Straw

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
An “irresistible” environmental fairy tale with “funny rhymes and an essential message” that proves even little ones can join the fight against single-use plastics (Sy Montgomery, author of The Soul of an Octopus).
 
Follow Sippy, the world’s last plastic straw, as he discovers how he can help create a cleaner, safer world for his new animal friends.
Sippy, a plastic straw who was used once and then discarded, worries what will happen to him when he realizes he can’t be recycled. As he flies, floats, and flutters around the planet, he meets animals who are struggling with the plastic problem. He chats with a raccoon with a 6-pack ring around his neck, a cardinal whose nest is made entirely of junk, turtles who confuse grocery bags with food, a hermit crab forced to live in a plastic cap, and a startled duck who runs around with a chip bag on her head. Finally, Sippy is swallowed by a hungry whale who is dining on ocean trash! Just when all hope seems lost, he skyrockets to freedom and calls out “Together we can fix this! Let's clean our world—let’s try!”
Parents and teachers of children 7-10 years old can use Sippy’s colorful adventure—based on real examples of animals in our environment—to raise awareness about the impacts of plastics on nature and to teach children about alternatives to single-use plastics.
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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      December 1, 2020
      Cast away after one use, Sippy the plastic straw travels through all the places plastic trash ends up, from a bird's nest to and through a whale's stomach. Matthiessen regularly uses her artistic skills to raise political and environmental awareness. Here, in her first book, one small straw's adventure illustrates the massive problem of plastic trash. Straws can't be recycled, but being small and light, they can travel far. Along his way, Sippy meets a raccoon wearing a six-pack ring around his neck, an owl entangled by a balloon's string, a hermit crab with a bottle-top shell, plastic-bag-eating turtles, and much more. With pen and ink, watercolor, and application of digital effects, the artist has created a distressing, plastic-filled world that is, sadly, not as far from reality as the story of the talking straw. This is a sobering presentation for the intended readers and listeners, and the ending, though hopeful, is not happy (although the clever endpapers suggest something will be done). Sippy's tale is important, but it's told in rhyming couplets set in a plodding iambic heptameter marked by awkward word choices and emphases that will require practice before reading aloud. Caregivers who want to share the story might do better just talking through the pictures and the final "What Can You and Your Family Do" spread. A laudable effort expressed in subpar verse. (Picture book. 5-8)

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • Kindle Book
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Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

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