"The main narrative reads smoothly aloud, and the pictures, though detailed, should show well to a small group. Author's and illustrator's notes and a comment from the actual creek rescuer complete the package. A heartening story of environmental restoration."Kirkus Reviews
"A heartening picture book that celebrates the thoughtful restoration of a prairie."Booklist
"A delightful picture book."Cabin Living Magazine
"The story springs to life through Martin’s (Alice Waters and the Trip to Delicious) buoyant, personified language. McGehee’s (North Woods Girl) vibrant, stylized illustrations show nearly smiling fish, birds, and insects populating their new environment."Publishers Weekly
"Chronicling the true story of one man’s quest to revive a stream rumored to have run through the prairies of Iowa, Jacqueline Briggs Martin relates the trials and triumphs in Creekfinding, a return to nature that proves that ‘a creek isn’t just water.’"Foreword Reviews
"Eloquent narrative nonfiction to inspire the future caretakers of our planet."School Library Journal
"Reading this story aloud to my three children has already inspired change in our local ecosystem."Wellesley Magazine
"Creekfinding is a beautiful rendering of this inspiring true story of environmentalism in action."Little Village
"Creekfinding will have young readers thinking how they can find and support their own wilderness in the places they live."Children’s Compass Chronicle
"A great book to share with curious children."Kids and Eggs
"A lovely and inspiring new children’s book."The Gazette
"We all need to hear stories like this one; true stories about people who have brought about change and made the world a better place through their actions. Hearing such stories lifts us up, and we are encouraged to do what we can to make our part of the world more beautiful."Through The Looking Glass Children’s Book Reviews
"With patience and passion, the process paid off, in this environmentally engaging story of hope and the tenacity of spirit displayed by those who care about the Earth - their commitment restores our planet to its natural beauty. How grateful we are for their contributions."The Missourian
"Readers of all ages will appreciate the sequence of events in restoring the creek and the anecdotal comments about frogs, and the life cycle of Brook Trout."Oneora Reading Journal
02/01/2017
Gr 1–3—Dedicated to "those who take care of our green places," this true account of how native Iowan Michael Osterholm "found" and restored a lost creek teaches children about ecosystems, problem-solving, and determination. When a neighbor told Osterholm that he once caught a brook trout in Osterholm's newly acquired cornfield, a dream was born. ("Mike knew there must have been a creek on that prairie. He wanted to find the creek, make a place for brook trout, birds, bugs, and frogs…. Others laughed, said Mike's plan was foolishness. Lost is lost.") With a little help from his friends and some heavy machines, he located the bottom of the creek and cleared its path. But Osterholm's dream required both hard work and patience—he planted grass and green shoots on the banks and waited three summers for them to grow. Gradually plants grew, and insects and small fish appeared. Finally, it was time to introduce the trout. McGehee traveled to the actual site to witness the water and wildlife firsthand before producing her stunning illustrations. ("I wanted to re-create the textures and colors I saw, so readers could 'walk' alongside Brook Creek as they learned about its restoration.") The text is broken up with chapter headings, such as "Trout in a Cornfield" and "Fish Squiggles," and small, italicized sidebars in blades of grass or streams of water provide additional information. VERDICT Eloquent narrative nonfiction to inspire the future caretakers of our planet.—Barbara Auerbach, New York City Public Schools
2016-12-14
Bulldozed years earlier and filled to make a cornfield, a lost creek is found and restored on an Iowa farm. When Michael Osterholm learned that a creek had once run under his farmland, he determined to restore it. Following old photographs and using heavy machinery to uncover the original bed and add stones to the bottom, he then planted grasses, providing the necessary ingredients for the creek to thrive again. "Mike said the water remembered. / It seeped in from the sides, / raced down the riffles and runs, / burbled into holes, filled the creek." Plants, insects, frogs, birds, and small fish called sculpin returned on their own. A final touch was to stock the stream with the brook trout that once made it their home. Illustrator McGehee's made her ripply, creature-filled illustrations look like painted woodcuts by using scratchboard, watercolor, and dyes. Her curving lines are filled with life. One striking spread has no color, only the gray outlines of what is to come. Although Osterholm and the restorers appear to be white in the illustrations, a multiracial group is shown enjoying the restored creek at the end. Short lines of text are set in clear areas, but occasionally extra facts appear in tiny letters on the vegetation. The main narrative reads smoothly aloud, and the pictures, though detailed, should show well to a small group. Author's and illustrator's notes and a comment from the actual creek rescuer complete the package. A heartening story of environmental restoration. (Informational picture book. 5-9)