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Kelly Crull - Washed Ashore: Making Art from Ocean Plastic

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Kelly Crull Washed Ashore: Making Art from Ocean Plastic
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Every day, we use plastic products. And where do these items go when we are done with them?
When artist Angela Haseltine Pozzi found plastic trash polluting the beach near her home, she took action. She formed an organization called Washed Ashore and started gathering trash from beaches and using it to create incredible sculptures of wildlife. These sculptures travel the country to teach people about the importance of these animals-and the problems caused by plastic pollution.
Author and photographer Kelly Crull highlights fourteen spectacular sculptures, along with hints to find common objects hidden among the debris. Theres information about each ocean animal as well as tips for how you can reduce your plastic use, hold a beach cleanup and make your own plastic art. Be inspired to get creative in protecting the worlds oceans!
Artist Angela Haseltine Pozzi saw a problem, took action, and now uses her work to educate others, something readers might be inspired to do by this book. Introductory pages describe how Pozzi saw trash on the beach near her Oregon town and enlisted the help of locals to gather it and create giant sculptures of marine animals. Pozzi then created Washed Ashore, an organization that teaches youngsters how trash harms marine animals. Following the introduction, Crull introduces readers to 14 of the sculptures created by Pozzi and her volunteers, such as a giant Pacific octopus, a rockhopper penguin, and a sea jelly. Clear, close-up photographs show the creations looking fascinating but also suitably forlorn. Each is accompanied by details on the animal in question, how it is endangered by garbage, and how to help-easy-to-implement tips include, for example, eating ice cream from a cone rather than using a plastic spoon. Readers at the younger end of the grade range will enjoy searching the images for the items shown beneath each photo and learning how to make their own art from trash, while a section of more advanced activities, such as keeping a field journal, might appeal more to older students. An excellent work on an unusual topic and a must for school and library shelves.-starred, Booklist
Vibrant, crisp photographs of 14 sea creatures sculpted from recycled plastic are only the beginning of this engaging book. The sculptures were created to travel around the country to educate people about the multiple threats posed by our plastic trash. Each spread includes fascinating facts about an animal along with common sense actions that even kids can take to reduce the pollution of our oceans. A seek-and-find feature adds an extra layer of engagement while also highlighting just how many ways we incorporate plastic into our lives. Back matter includes instructions on how to organize a plastic scavenger hunt, an explanation of how the sculptures in the book were made, and a flowchart that lays out the consequences of drinking tap water vs. water from a plastic bottle. VERDICT A visually and factually compelling call to environmental action that will speak to children.-School Library Journal

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To the more than fourteen thousand volunteers and dedicated staff of Washed - photo 4
To the more than fourteen thousand volunteers
and dedicated staff of Washed Ashore who have
made this project possible K.C.
Acknowledgments
Special thanks to Angela Haseltine Pozzi, Frank Rocco, and Katie Dougherty at Washed Ashore;
Carol Hinz and Jesseca Fusco at Millbrook; Deborah Warren at East West Literary; the Crull clan:
April, Alleke, Teo, and Ruben; Dr. Lynn Waterhouse at the Shedd Aquarium; Nina van Zinnicq
Bergmann at the Indonesian Waste Platform; Sara Longo with the eXXpedition crew; Carl Berg
at Surfrider; Eva Cicoria with Paddle Out Plastic; Carla Isobel Elliff at the University of So Paulo;
Katey Valentine at the University of York; Dr. Syma Ebbin at the University of Connecticut; Astrid
C. Fischer with the Marine Litter Research Unit, University of Plymouth; Dr. Deborah Rudnick
at the Bainbridge Island School District; and Rogier Bos, Todd Bates, Tierney Thys, Marianne
Copeland, Sandra Curtis, Alyssa Lefebvre, and Karla Robison.
Text and photographs copyright 2022 by Kelly Crull
All rights reserved. International copyright secured. No part of this book may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any meanselectronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording, or otherwisewithout the prior written permission of Lerner Publishing
Group, Inc., except for the inclusion of brief quotations in an acknowledged review.
Millbrook Press
An imprint of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc.
241 First Avenue North
Minneapolis, MN 55401 USA
For reading levels and more information, look up this title at www.lernerbooks.com.
Image credits: Blue Sky imagery/Shutterstock.com, p. 32; all other images provided by Kelly Crull.
Cover image: Kelly Crull.
Designed by Mary Ross.
Main body text set in Mikado. Typeface provided by HVD Fonts.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Crull, Kelly, author.
Title: Washed ashore : making art from ocean plastic / Kelly Crull.
Description: Minneapolis : Millbrook Press, [2022] | Audience: Ages 610 | Audience: Grades 23 |
Summary: Angela Haseltine Pozzi makes animal sculptures from plastic that washes up on
beaches. Photos of these sculptures are paired with facts about featured sea creatures and the
impacts of plastic on sea life Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2021013588 (print) | LCCN 2021013589 (ebook) | ISBN 9781728430300 (library
binding) | ISBN 9781728445373 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Pozzi, Angela Haseltine, 1957Themes, motivesJuvenile literature. | Refuse as
art materialJuvenile literature. | Plastics as art materialJuvenile literature. | Plastic marine
debrisJuvenile literature.
Classification: LCC NB237.P72 C78 2022 (print) | LCC NB237.P72 (ebook) | DDC 731/.2dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021013588
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021013589
Manufactured in the United States of America
1-49474-49527-8/25/2021
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WASHED ASHORE WASHED ASHORE Making Art from Ocean Plastic KELLY CRULL - photo 5
WASHED
ASHORE
WASHED
ASHORE
Making Art from Ocean Plastic
KELLY CRULL
KELLY CRULL
Millbrook Press Minneapolis
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T he ocean is home to all kinds of wonderful creatures Slimy sea slugs - photo 7
T he ocean is home to all kinds of wonderful
creatures. Slimy sea slugs. Prickly puffer fish.
Glittery grunions. Flashlight fish that glow in the
dark. Octopuses that change color if they get scared or
grumpy. Dolphins that play tag. Whales that sing so loud
theyll rattle your bones.
The ocean is important to all kinds of people too. Some
ride its waves. Others explore its depths. Some hunt for
food. Others sail on it around the world. While some of us have
never even been to the ocean, all of us have left something behind in
its waters. Do you know what weve left? Our trash. Every ocean in the world has
trash in it. Even a clown fish will tell you that living in a dirty ocean isnt funny,
but the worst part is our trash hurts animals. They get tangled up in the trash and
cant swim, or they eat the trash because they think its food. Eating trash can
hurt or kill them.
Angela Haseltine Pozzi noticed trash was washing up on the beach near her house
and no one was picking it up. Angela had a big idea! But she knew she would need
help, so she asked people from her town in Bandon, Oregon, to join her. Together
they picked up trash from nearby beaches and used it to make giant sculptures of
marine animals at risk because of plastic pollution. The sculptures were so big and
beautiful that many people came to see them.
In 2010 Angela and her friends started an organization called Washed Ashore.
Their animal sculptures have traveled all over the United States and Canada to visit
schools, zoos, aquariums, and museums. They have taught many people about the
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