Harold the Iceberg Melts Down
By (Author) Lisa Wyzlic
Illustrated by Rebecca Syracuse
Feiwel and Friends
Feiwel and Friends
25th July 2023
United States
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage social topics: Environment, sustainability and green issues
Hardback
40
Width 211mm, Height 260mm, Spine 11mm
316g
Harold is an iceberg . . . lettuce. (But he doesn't realize the "lettuce" part because some of his sticker has been ripped off.) So one day when he sees a documentary about how the icebergs are melting, Harold starts to worry, thinking that he's melting too. As his anxiety grows and grows, and he tries to find a way to stop melting, his fellow food friends try to help him cool down in a different way. Accompanied by Rebecca Syracuse's bold, whimsical artwork, Lisa Wyzlic's debut picture book is all about the importance of friendship and self-care, perfect for any young reader worried about their planet's future.
Praise for Harold the Iceberg Melts Down:
"A punny tale of food friends tackling anxiety and climate change ... With humor and a light touch, Wyzlic balances brief expository passages with emotional dialogue. Syracuse's digitally rendered anthropomorphic foods feature noodly stick limbs, expressive eyes, and enjoyable edible details, among them a chair made of bread and olives, a butter-stick TV stand, and a hot-sauce mustache." --Publishers Weekly
"Wyzlic tackles eco-anxiety at a kid-friendly level, and cartoony Harold and his fridge friends soften the reality of a crisis that even younger readers are beginning to realize as dire. Despite Harold's misread on his own danger in the iceberg situation, the book doesn't mock or downplay his anxiety, but it does emphasize that worrying to the state of paralysis isn't going to do anyone any good: 'Harold was so focused on his impending doom that they couldn't get through to him.' ... There's very much a 'keep calm and carry on' message here that, when paired with the real actionable items provided at the end of the book, gives some amount of agency to the generation that will be most impacted by the changing climate." --The Bulletin
"The stratagems for handling stress are useful, and the colorful, cartoonish digital illustrations are energetic and expressive. ... Fun, with worthwhile points raised. It may even get some kids to try lettuce." --Kirkus Reviews
"The characters, googly-eyed vegetables with loads of digitally acquired personality, are charming, more than charitable, and children will love the adventure." --School Library Journal
Lisa Wyzlic enjoys imagining creatures and objects with strong feelings and telling their stories. Like her characters, Lisa often has her own strong feelings, though normally not about melting. She lives with her husband, two kids, and two rescue cats in Manitoba, Canada. Harold the Iceberg Melts Down is her debut picture book. Rebecca Syracuse is an illustrator and children's book designer based in Jersey City. When she isn't drawing faces on vegetables, you might find her scoping the shelves of her local bookstore, or trying to pet a stray cat. Harold the Iceberg Melts Down is her picture-book illustration debut. rebeccasyracuse.com