A walrus’s life is filled with ice and ocean and sound.
Lilting rhyming verse follows a walrus’s actions in his icy home. He plays on an ice floe, dives deep into the frigid water, seeks and finds food, and playfully shoos away a pesky puffin. Lawler vividly describes the walrus as he “waddles” and “lumbers” on the ice and twirls and whirls in the sea, keeping warm thanks to his massive layers of fat. He joins a huge pack of his cronies to snuggle and nuzzle. All is not always peaceful and calm; he engages in a mighty, crashing, tusk-bashing fight with another walrus. Fight over, he lets out with a variety of delightfully spelled calls and songs that echo throughout the area and will encourage young readers to try echoing those sounds themselves. Lawler keeps the tone light and fun while imparting a great deal of information about a walrus’s physicality, habitats, and food sources. No explanation is given within the text for the fight or the calls, or for the appearance of babies born in the spring, but answers and additional information on all things walrus are provided in an afterword. Ering’s brilliant, luminous, lifelike paintings capture their subject close-up and in great detail, accurately depicting his every movement and mood and perfectly capturing the setting in icy whites and deep-sea blues and greens under a purple-gray sky.
These fascinating creatures will entrance little readers and their grown-ups.
(Informational picture book. 4-8)