Elisa Boxer

A Peek into the Process of One Turtle’s Last Straw Illustrator Marta Álvarez Miguéns 

By Elisa Boxer

Three years ago, as I watched this video of marine biologists pulling a plastic straw out of a sea turtle’s nose, my first thought was: This has to be a children’s book! 

On shelves Tuesday, May 10, 2022!

My second thought was: This is waaaay too graphic for a children’s book.

One of my biggest challenges in writing the text was to convey the heart-wrenching tale of the sea turtle’s near-death experience, while making the story palatable and gentle enough for young readers. 

But if this was my challenge, imagine what the illustrator was up against! 

Marta Álvarez Miguéns

“The true story on which this book is based is quite harsh,” said Marta Álvarez Miguéns, the artist behind the book’s brilliant images. “When I saw the video about the rescue, I had a hard time watching it. I am quite sensitive to animal suffering and I don't like to see animals suffering at all,” Marta said. “I don't need to see a very difficult situation to empathize with them.”

From the moment I saw the preliminary sketches for this book, I was astounded at how Marta was able to portray the turtle as believable, yet child-friendly and relatable. 

When I asked Marta how she managed to achieve this, she told me: “One of my biggest motivations in illustrating this story was to get readers to empathize with the turtle as much as possible.” Creating a turtle who was “a bit less realistic,” with a focus on “adorable” eyes from a close-up perspective, Marta told me she “tried to find a balance between sadness and hope.”

It’s a balance she struck more perfectly than I could have imagined.

Here’s an example of just how meticulously Marta’s process reflects her desire to tread thoughtfully, experiment, and refine an illustration when needed. This is an early sketch of a scene where the turtle is trapped in a trawler net:

“I had drawn one of the illustrations in which the turtle was trapped in a net in the foreground,” Marta told me, referring to the top illustration. 

“In the end, I thought it was too much suffering and I preferred to make a general shot in which we could see the sad situation the turtle was in, but without so much sensationalism.”

So Marta replaced the scene on top with the one you see below it. The bottom illustration is the one that made it into the finished book. 

Here it is in full color:

There’s something else about this scene that adds more emotional impact than words ever could. As you can see, Marta created “an emotional link between the fish that accompanied the turtle on its journey” and the turtle trapped in the net. 

Just look at their faces! Nowhere in the text do I say anything about the fish. And yet Marta masterfully created a scene where “we see that some are trapped in the net and others are left outside looking helplessly at the situation in which they cannot do anything. I liked this illustration better because it had many more things to tell than the one with the turtle in the foreground,” she said.

In addition to capturing the emotion involved in the turtle’s harrowing journey, the book also features breathtaking underwater scenes. Marta told me she “wanted to show the beauty and richness of the environment that we should preserve.”

Thanks to Marta’s generosity, this incredible depiction of a Costa Rican coral reef from the book is available as a limited-edition, 5x7 print for anyone who orders the book through my local indie, Print: A Bookstore

I’m so grateful to Marta for these prints, for her glorious art, and for her compassion in striking that sensitive balance between sadness and hope. 

Book Details

ONE TURTLE'S LAST STRAW: The Real-Life Rescue That Sparked a Sea Change

by Elisa Boxer

Illustrated by Marta Álvarez Miguéns

Pub Date: May 10, 2022
ISBN: 978-0593372463
Publisher: Crown Books for Young Readers


Elisa Boxer is an Emmy and Murrow award-winning journalist whose work has been featured in publications including The New York Times, Fast Company and Inc. magazine. She has reported for newspapers, magazines and TV stations, and has a passion for telling stories about people finding the courage to create change. She is the author of The Voice That Won the Vote, A Seat at the Table, One Turtle's Last Straw, and the forthcoming books SPLASH! and Covered in Color. Elisa lives in Maine, and you can visit her at elisaboxer.com, IG @boxerelisa, Twitter @eboxer, and Facebook.

Marta Álvarez Miguéns is an author and children's book illustrator living in A Coruña, Spain. In 2007, her artwork was selected and exhibited at the Bratislava Biennial of Illustration (BIB). She illustrated Shark Lady: The True Story of How Eugenie Clark Became the Ocean's Most Fearless Scientist, which was named one of the Best Children's Books of 2017 by Parents Magazine, and won the Blue Spruce Award in 2018. She also painted the funny and charming illustrations for What Is Poo?, which won the Silver Award at the Junior Design Awards 2017. Visit her at martalvarez.com and @martalvarez.art on IG.

20 Questions: Book Ideas

Welcome back to our series, 20 QUESTIONS!,

where we answer questions about writing, reading, and author life.

This month’s question:

“How did you come up with the idea for your most recent book?”

Carrie Finison

“For my upcoming book, LULU & ZOEY: A SISTER STORY, I remember vividly the moment I came up with the idea. I was driving my son home from preschool and his sister was baby-singing—loudly—in her infant seat. He complained bitterly that she was “always too loud,” and I responded with some parental wisdom about how no one is ever “always” anything. Sometimes she was too loud. Sometimes she was quiet. Sometimes she liked playing with him. Sometimes she wanted to play on her own. By the time we got home the structure of a new sibling story had taken shape.”

—Carrie Finison, author of LULU & ZOEY: A Sister Story, illus. Brittany Jackson (Running Press Kids, June 2022)

Rajani LaRocca

“I was attending a children’s literature symposium with friends in the summer of 2013. While I was waiting in line for lunch, a story idea popped into my head in a visual way: I thought of a sari, and how the colors and designs from the body are reflected in the border, and vice versa. I quickly drew a sketch in my notebook (which is unusual for me!). I then took notes on a “mirror story” about a girl and her grandmother, and how they are each homesick and lonely while visiting each other, and how they help each other feel at home. I’LL GO AND COME BACK was born.”

—Rajani LaRocca, author of I’LL GO AND COME BACK, illus. Sara Palacios (Candlewick Press, March 2022)

Hope Lim

“Childhood memories of my hometown in Korea and the changes I witnessed every time I visited my parents were the inspirations for MOMMY’S HOMETOWN. I used to walk to the river and play there all day. Sharing that memory with my kids and taking them to the river inspired me to write a story that captures the passage of time in a place where old and new coexist.”

—Hope Lim, author of MOMMY’S HOMETOWN, illus. Jaime Kim (Candlewick Press, April 2022)

Elisa Boxer

“My agent and I had been discussing writing a book about ocean pollution, so I began internet searches to narrow down the topic. When I came across the viral video of the turtle who nearly died from swallowing a straw, and the marine biologists who rescued him, I knew I wanted to share this story with kids!”

—Elisa Boxer, author of ONE TURTLE’S LAST STRAW: The Real-Life Rescue That Sparked a Sea Change, illus. Marta Alvarez Miguens (Crown/Random House Kids, May 2022)

Kim Rogers

“The inspiration for my lyrical debut picture book, JUST LIKE GRANDMA, came from a book and a song: Sylvia Liu’s A MORNING WITH GRANDPA, which touched me deeply, and a gorgeous line in a favorite song by the Goo Goo Dolls called “Autumn Leaves.” After reading Sylvia’s book, I knew I wanted to write a story about a Wichita granddaughter’s relationship with her grandmother, as intergenerational relationships are important to us in our Wichita culture.”

—Kim Rogers (Wichita), author of JUST LIKE GRANDMA, illus. Julie Flett (Cree-Métis) (Heartdrum/HarperCollins, Winter 2023)

Anna Crowley Redding

“I couldn’t sleep in the middle of the night. So I grabbed my phone and was reading news headlines when I spotted an Associated Press headline. The Coast Guard was naming a new ship after a hero, Kate Moore, who began keeping a lighthouse and saving lives at age 12 … in the 1800s. I was completely blown away. I started to work on a book about her the very next morning.”

—Anna Crowley Redding, COURAGE LIKE KATE: The True Story of Girl Lighthouse Keeper, illus. Emily Sutton (Random House Studio, August 2022)

Soaring '20s on World Read Aloud Day

Mark your calendars for February 3, 2021 — it’s World Read Aloud Day! 

LitWorld started World Read Aloud Day (WRAD) in 2010 to honor the power and joy of reading. To celebrate, authors and illustrators come together each year to offer virtual classroom visits around the world. This year, teachers and librarians have their pick of 15 Soaring ‘20s creators!

Most virtual visits go something like this:

  • 1-2 minutes: Creator introduces themself and talks a little about his or her books.

  • 3-5 minutes: Creator reads aloud a short picture book, or a short excerpt from a chapter book/novel

  • 5-10  minutes: Creator answers a few questions from students about reading/writing.

  • 1-2 minutes: Creator book-talks a couple books they love (but didn’t write/illustrate!) as recommendations for the kids.

Before you sign up, most authors request you have the following available.

  • School name, grade level/teacher name, and approximate number of students

  • Platform (ex. Skype, Zoom, Google Meet)

  • Skype name or link to virtual meeting

  • Cell phone number for day-of-event emergencies

NOTE: Please pay attention to each creators’ time zone when scheduling, as we are located across the U.S.!

To check availability and/or schedule with an individual creator, click on her name below.


Angela Burke Kunkel

(DIGGING FOR WORDS):
FULLY BOOKED

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Candy Wellins

(SATURDAYS ARE FOR STELLA):
FULLY BOOKED

WRAD Candy.jpg

Carrie Finison

(DOZENS OF DOUGHNUTS/
DON’T HUG DOUG):
FULLY BOOKED

WRAD Carrie.jpg

WRAD Elisa.jpg

Elisa Boxer

(THE VOICE THAT WON THE VOTE): Noon-1 p.m. ET


Kelly Carey

(HOW LONG IS FOREVER?):
9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. ET

WRAD Kelly.jpg

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Kirsten W. Larson

(WOOD, WIRE, WINGS):
11 a.m.-4:30 p.m. ET


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Kjersten Hayes

(THE ELEPHANTS’ GUIDE TO HIDE-AND-SEEK):
FULLY BOOKED


WRAD+Lindsay.jpg

Lindsay H. Metcalf

(BEATRIX POTTER, SCIENTIST/NO VOICE TOO SMALL/ FARMERS UNITE!):
FULLY BOOKED


WRAD+Isabella.jpg

Isabella Kung

(NO FUZZBALL!):
FULLY BOOKED


WRAD Joana.jpg

Joana Pastro

(LILLYBELLE, A DAMSEL NOT IN DISTRESS): FULLY BOOKED


WRAD+Julie.jpg

Julie Rowan-Zoch

(LOUIS): FULLY BOOKED


WRAD+Rajani.jpg

Rajani LaRocca

(SEVEN GOLDEN RINGS/MIDSUMMER’S MAYHEM/RED, WHITE, AND WHOLE): FULLY BOOKED


WRAD Saira.jpg

Saira Mir

(MUSLIM GIRLS RISE):
FULLY BOOKED


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Susan Kusel

(THE PASSOVER GUEST):
9 a.m.-3 p.m. ET


WRAD+Vicky.jpg

Vicky Fang

(LAYLA AND THE BOTS/I CAN CODE/INVENT-A-PET):
FULLY BOOKED


Can’t connect with a Soaring ‘20s creator? Find more available authors on author Kate Messner’s website.