Ice cycle : poems about the life of ice
(2022)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Lerner Publishing Group, 2022
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781728473871 MWT15185036, 172847387X 15185036
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Pancake ice, floebergs, glaciers, icicles . . . cold temperatures create an astonishing variety of ice forms! From Maria Gianferrari, award-winning author of Play Like an Animal!,comes a beautiful collaboration between verse and science. Brief poems and ethereal illustrations introduce readers to the many different types of ice on land and at sea. Fascinating back matter provides additional information about water as a solid, liquid, and gas, as well as more details about the unique forms of ice mentioned in the poems. Celebrate winter with this evocative and atmospheric exploration of ice! "From hummocks and bummocks to frazil and floebergs, an introduction in poems and explanatory notes to ice's many states and formations. Gianferrari's sonorous drifts of free verse are sometimes confusingly allusive on first reading-'Cat ice whorls / Swirl and twirl. / Brinicles sink, / Plume and bloom. // Pancake ice stacks / Smack and crack'-but make clearer sense after examining the illustrations and reading the extensive notes at the end. Readers who think ice in nature comes only in sheets, floating chunks, or icicles are in for an eye-opening experience as, in naturalistic vignettes and vistas, Chen depicts silky strands of hair ice around twigs and needle-thin spikes emerging from frozen ground; freezing seawater undergoing subtle color changes while crystallizing from 'frazil' to 'grease ice,' 'nilas,' and ultimately free-floating sea ice; and, when temperatures rise, aging into 'rotten' or 'candle' ice before melting to begin the 'ice cycle' again. Though the author neglects to note that water boils at 212 degrees only at sea level (and simplistically claims that it comes only in three states), she finishes off handsomely, listing types of terrestrial and marine ice (of which 'new' sea ice alone has seven); explaining how floebits, floebergs, brash ice, and growlers are distinguished by their size ranges; defining numerous other special terms; then closing with leads to books, videos, and science projects. Bundled-up human figures in the pictures are rare and small but do show variations in skin color. (This book was reviewed digitally.) A rewarding exploration of a common substance's complex nature."-Kirkus Reviews

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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