Here Comes Ocean

This first purchase is a perfect storytime choice to usher in the beach season, and the rhyming, repetitive text is simple enough to enable even the youngest children to chime in. A bonus: Youngsters will meet a few unusual ocean creatures, all of which are labeled on the endpapers.
— School Library Journal STARRED Review
Illustration by Paola Zakimi, from Here Comes Ocean. Written by Meg Fleming and published by Beach Lane Books (May 2020)

Illustration by Paola Zakimi, from Here Comes Ocean. Written by Meg Fleming and published by Beach Lane Books (May 2020)

 
Here Comes Ocean COVER.jpg

Here Comes Ocean

Grab a big bucket, your best pup pal, and a whole lot of imagination, and get ready for a day at the beach!

Illustrations by Paola Zakimi

Beach Lane Books ~ Simon & Schuster

Available May 19, 2020

Kirkus Reviews

Toes get quite a workout at the beach. 

Think about it—certainly Fleming has. On a sunshiny day, a family with two parents, one child, and a dog has the beach to itself. Always accompanied by a curious crab, the child and dog explore. Toes cool and splash in the water, dig and sink into the sand, cling to rocks, race from the incoming tide, and finally link with one another around the dad’s back as the child falls asleep in his arms. Long kelp stems become “ropy lassos” and the dog’s tug of war toy. As night falls, the action slows, and a bioluminescent scene emerges. “Moon beach. Night beach. Sparkly swish. / Wish upon a night-light fish.” Scenes are described using short rhyming couplets with an interesting word pattern and the titular refrain, printed in an ever increasing font as the tide comes in and the sound of the waves crescendos until the two explorers are swamped by a large wave. “Too MUCH ocean!” Warm, realistic illustrations alternate between general beach scenes and close-ups of natural treasures like sand dollars, shorebirds, and tide-pool–dwelling starfish, algae, anemone, and barnacles. Illustrations on endpapers identify some of the creatures, but although many varieties are illustrated, kelp is the only algae named. The parents appear to be interracial, the mom’s skin light brown and the dad’s white; the child protagonist presents white. A seaside bedtime book capturing a delightful day of beach exploration. (Picture book. 3-6)

Kirkus Reviews

This first purchase is a perfect storytime choice to usher in the beach season, and the rhyming, repetitive text is simple enough to enable even the youngest children to chime in. A bonus: Youngsters will meet a few unusual ocean creatures, all of which are labeled on the endpapers.

School Library Journal

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