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A Gift of Dust: How Saharan Plumes Feed the Planet

A Gift of Dust: How Saharan Plumes Feed the Planet

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From two award-winning creators comes a picture book that reveals the hidden wonders of how Saharan Dust impacts the world: from slowing a hurricane to nourishing a rainforest.

This dust . . .
of what lived once
sustains what lives today
and what will be born . . .
tomorrow.

An ancient catfish becomes a fossil, and as the lake where it lived dries up, the fossil turns to dust--but this isn't ordinary dust. This dust begins in Chad, West Africa, but winds carry it across the continent, over the Atlantic ocean, to nourish and replenish the Amazon rain forest and beyond.

A Gift of Dust takes readers on a journey that shows just how interconnected our planet is, and how something so small can have such a huge impact. With lyrical, awe-inspiring verse based in fact, and stunning art from a Caldecott honoree, this is a story for our times.

Author: Martha Brockenbrough
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers
Published: 05/27/2025
Pages: 40
Weight: 1lbs
Size: 11.20h x 9.20w x 0.50d
ISBN: 9780593428429


Review Citation(s):
Publishers Weekly 02/24/2025
Booklist 03/01/2025 pg. 91
Kirkus Reviews 03/15/2025
School Library Journal 04/01/2025 pg. 136
Horn Book Magazine 07/01/2025 pg. 108
Hornbook Guide to Children 01/01/2025 - Outstanding, Noteworthy In Style

About the Author
Martha Brockenbrough is the author of more than twenty books for young readers, from picture books up through YA. Some of her picture books include I Am an American: the Wong Kim Ark Story (ALA Noteable Book for Children), This Old Dog, Cheerful Chick, and more! Her books have made several Best of The Year lists. She lives in Seattle with her family.

Juana Martinez-Neal is the winner of the Pura Belpré Illustrator Award for La Princesa and the Pea by Susan Middleton Elya, and the 2019 Caldecott Honor Award for Alma and How She Got Her Name, which she also wrote. She is also the recepient of the 2020 Robert E. Sibert Medal for Fry Bread: A Native American Story. Originally from Lima, Peru, she lives with her husband and three children in Connecticut where she cooks with lots of Roma tomatoes.
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