A passionate nature lover and a renowned artist trace the awe-inspiring spring migration of millions of creatures to the Arctic – the greatest journey on Earth.

This is a book full of creatures: birds, fish and mammals. They are all embarking on one long, intense journey that will take them across oceans and continents, for thousands of miles – braving predators, starvation and extreme weather conditions – to reach the very top of the world. Each spring, animals migrate north to spend their summer in the snow-melt Arctic. In this season, the sun rarely sets and so millions of animals – of over 200 species – are drawn by the rich food sources and safe breeding grounds. This adventure is the largest, most extraordinary migration in nature; it is beautifully captured in Nick Dowson's lyrical narrative and Patrick Benson's stunning illustrations.

Creators

Nick Dowson is an English and drama teacher. Passionate about natural history, he has written two books for the Walker Nature Storybooks series: Tracks of a Panda and Tigress. He lives in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.

Patrick Benson has won many awards for his work, including the Mother Goose Award and the Kurt Maschler Award. He has worked with both Roald Dahl and Russell Hoban and his book with Martin Waddell, Owl Babies, has sold over two and a half million copies. He lives in the Scottish Borders.

Reviews

This striking account of arctic migration offers a northerly, book-bound counterpart to “March of the Penguins.” Dowson’s descriptions are both simple and poetic, as polar bears, gray whales, jaegers, snow geese and pregnant caribou make their way from points south toward the North Pole in Benson’s sumptuous, shimmery paintings. Appropriately oversize considering its vast majesty, this book will inspire in young readers an equally outsize sense of wonder.

The New York Times

Simple but effective, this is a beautiful introduction to a remarkable region that should encourage any child’s sense of wonder.

Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

Dowson’s poetic text and Benson’s impressionistic watercolors introduce seasonal changes as well as various birds, mammals, and even fish that undertake the long migration. The spare text and expansive views provide an inviting sense of the terrain and the journeys endured by the animals…an attractive entry in the growing number of nonfiction poetry picture books, offering rich read-aloud and browsing opportunities.

School Library Journal (starred review)

The text has an appealing delicacy, with a touch of lyricism… Benson’s detailed illustrations in watercolor, pencil, and pen move easily from subtlety to grandeur; while the draftsmanship is softly realistic, the imagination behind them brings the natural world to vivid life.

Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (starred review)

Dowson combines sound knowledge of his subjects with thoughtful lyricism; Benson’s lovely spreads, a mix of panels and full-bleed spreads, are a testament to the wonder of the migratory instinct.

Publishers Weekly

Benson’s luminous watercolor with pen and pencil illustrations, spread out beautifully over the oversized pages, capture the harsh conditions of the icy Arctic winters, the fleeting verdancy of the tundra in mid-summer, and the graceful movements of the migrating groups as they pass through lower latitude forests, oceans, and skies. Particularly powerful are the contrasts between the illustrations of polar bears alone in the vast open spaces of early spring and those showing the teeming life and activity in high season.

Horn Book

Award winning illustrator Patrick Benson captures the beautiful landscapes and the harsh environment these great animals endure as they migrate. This book will certainly take you on what the author states as, “The greatest journey on earth!”

Library Media Connection

Dowson invites 7- to 12-year-olds to wonder at the desolate splendor of the northern realms and to marvel at the mystery of migration that draws millions of creatures there from across the globe every summer… Benson depicts these creatures, and the Arctic’s spare beauty, with dramatic illustrations in pen, pencil and watercolor that brim with beautiful blues, browns, grays and pale yellows.

Wall Street Journal

Featured as the Critics’ New Release Children’s Pick

Kirkus Reviews newsletter

Featured/recommended

Picture Book Reviews blog

Featured/recommended

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Best of the Indies 2011

Rogue Librarian blog

Featured/recommended

The Nonfiction Detectives blog

The lovely spreads both below and above water evoke the alternately lush and stark beauty of the Arctic.

Natural History Magazine

Featured/recommended

Etc. for Her

Featured/recommended

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Featured/recommended

Yellow Brick Road

Featured/recommended

Archimedes Notebook blog

A stunning look at the top of the world.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Featured/recommended

Travel for Kids

Featured/recommended in creative non-fiction roundup

NewsObserver.com

Featured/recommended

Charlotte Observer online

Five-starred review

Mensa for Kids online

Featured in Guide Book to Gift Books

Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books

Featured/recommended

Travel for Kids

Awards

SLA Information Book Award (2012) - Short-listed
Other books you'll love