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Marie-Paule Mahoney

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ORCAS FOREVER Cover
BOOK REVIEW

ORCAS FOREVER

BY Marie-Paule Mahoney • POSTED ON July 13, 2022

An illustrated nonfiction work for children about a special group of whales: the Southern Resident orcas of the Salish Sea in Washington state and British Columbia.

The story opens describing two matriarchs of the orca group hunting for Chinook salmon to eat and share with other whales in the pod. After introductory information about orcas, regarding their methods of communication, their diet, and their familial structure, retired educator Mahoney describes an almost magical event that only Southern Resident orcas engage in: a meetup known as the Greeting Ceremony, in which all the whales line up and regard each other silently for a few moments before joyously swimming and playing together. In this book’s account, the evening ends with a whale giving birth to a new calf. The author also tells of how these special creatures have also been documented traveling with a dead orca calf in what may be described as a thousand-mile grief swim. The Southern Resident orcas are closely monitored by scientists, Mahoney notes; they’ve found that Chinook salmon, which make up most of the whales’ diets, are in a sharp decline—they’re smaller, and there are fewer of them in recent years. Triplett’s painterly illustrations are beautiful, with a style that’s both realistic and dreamlike. Overall, the main text of this book is effectively tender and positive. However, the work intriguingly doesn’t sugarcoat events in the 1960s and ’70s that gave the Salish Sea the nickname “the sea of troubles”; a large number of Southern Resident orca whales were forcibly captured and taken to tanks all over the globe, which is how scientists learned about how they communicate. An afterword presents even more information about orcas as a species and specifics regarding the three pods that make up this specific group.

An affecting and informative book about a remarkable set of aquatic mammals.

Pub Date: July 13, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-977253-45-3

Page count: 46pp

Publisher: Outskirts Press

Review Posted Online: Aug. 31, 2022

COCO Cover
BOOK REVIEW

COCO

BY Marie-Paule Mahoney • POSTED ON June 30, 2018

Author Marie-Paule Mahoney and illustrator James Mahoney (Molly and Babou, 2014), along with artist Guiza (Ruff to Riches, 2016), offer an illustrated chapter book about a bear’s continuing adventures.

Black bear Babou discovered a sick, orphaned young cub called Coco and got her help from a veterinarian. Now seven months old and 40 pounds, Coco needs a proper “mama bear” to teach her survival skills before their hibernation instinct kicks in and they need to get away from more settled areas. On a journey north, Babou and Coco get permission from the local “dada bears” to find Coco an adoptive mother. Babou discovers a good candidate, a friendly bear with two cubs of her own, who agrees to foster Coco in exchange for Babou’s finding her a bigger den; Babou dubs her “Good Mama.” Coco learns bear essentials from Good Mama and her cubs before they all hibernate together. Afterward, the bears search for food, meet other animals, and enjoy springtime. Babou and Coco return south for a short visit, just in time to help the veterinarian’s dog, Rags, who has a heart problem. Back up north, Coco becomes friendly with Spiky, a young bear. After hibernating, she gives birth to two cubs of her own, whom she can now teach to live the wild life “that she was born to live.” In this follow-up, the author doesn’t attempt to make bears into human substitutes, as so many children’s books do. Barring a few anthropomorphic moments (such as Coco’s tears), the work is realistic about the sometimes-frightening struggles that bears face in the wild and the dangers they face from people. Unusually, readers get the story from an ursine point of view; for example, Good Mama approves when Coco gets rid of the veterinarian’s radio collar even though it’s meant to help keep her safe. The illustrations mix a realistic cartoon style with photos (and one black-and-white drawing), a decision that portrays Coco’s world well. The plot is episodic and can feel disconnected at times, although the overall life-cycle theme is helpful.

An engaging tale of bears from the animals’ perspective.

Pub Date: June 30, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-4787-9453-0

Page count: 98pp

Publisher: Outskirts Press

Review Posted Online: Oct. 2, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2018

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