Team Trash: A Time Traveler's Guide to Sustainability (Books for a Better Earth)

by Kate Wheeler (Author)

Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade
When a science project goes awry, two student activists travel through time to learn how to protect our Earth from plastic pollution in modern times.

Studious environmentalist Charlie is stuck with a science fair partner who seems like her complete opposite: Charlie wants to save the planet, and all Oliver wants is to doodle in his notebook. But when a mechanical mishap sends the two traveling back through time, they’ll have to work as a team to return to the present day.

In order for the time machine to send them back, the unlikely duo must gather data on recycling throughout the ages - from sustainable marketplaces in Edo Japan to garbage-gobbling pigs in 19th-century NYC. Yet the closer the team gets to the present day, the more that plastic presents a problem: they’re running out of time.

Harnessing their frustration over the daunting ecological future they’ve inherited, Charlie and Oliver discover the ways in which they can use their sustainability knowledge to return home and build a better earth.

In this sweeping educational adventure that transports readers across continents and centuries, Washington Post contributor Katie Wheeler invites readers into the history of recycling and how students can reduce plastic waste. Wheeler’s fresh journal-style graphic novel acknowledges the reality of plastic pollution while offering accessible activist solutions, playfully-illustrated sustainability tips, and an optimistic look into how modern scientists are combating waste.Books for a Better Earth are designed to inspire children to become active, knowledgeable participants in caring for the planet they live on.
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Kirkus

Upbeat and optimistic, with some uncomfortable realities to underscore the size of the task ahead.

ALA/Booklist

Informative, empowering, and inspiring for young climate activists.Informative, empowering, and inspiring for young climate activists.

Publishers Weekly

Two seemingly mismatched middle schoolers must partner up when tasked with a sustainability-themed assignment in this concise graphic novel debut by Wheeler and Huntington. Studious Charlie, portrayed with brown skin, has little faith that class clown Oliver, an East Asian-cued boy who prefers superheroes to research, will be much help with their project. The two routinely butt heads until they stumble upon a classmate's project called Time Bot, a clunky object resembling a go-cart. When the duo climb into the machine, they're mysteriously transported--with a "BWOOP!" and a "POP!"--to 72 CE Pompeii. Before they can travel back home, however, they must gather data surrounding recycling and sustainable practices or risk being stuck in the past forever. Subsequent time jumps to Edo-era Japan, 18th-century Philadelphia, and 19th-century N.Y.C. result in rapid-fire history lessons about resource management and environmental safety systems. While the overall pacing is sometimes choppy, the wide-ranging timeline provides glimpses into sustainability procedures spanning centuries, and the chronological momentum emphasizes the practice's evolutionary elements and connectivity across cultures. These snack-size history lessons--rendered in eye-catching color and easy-to-follow paneling interspersed with brief instructional guides--employ lightly slapstick humor to deliver digestible informational fare. Ages 10-14. (Aug.)

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

School Library Journal

Starred Review

Gr 3-6--Charlie is dismayed to be partnered with Oliver for their Sustainability Science Fair. Their teacher insists it must be a team effort, but all Oliver wants to do is doodle. When they meet to work on their project, a classmate's robot transports them back in time to Pompeii in 72 CE, where--thanks to bracelets with translation software--they learn how trash was recycled into building materials for walls. Once they've collected data, TimeBot whisks them to a new destination; on each stop, Charlie takes notes and Oliver sketches, collaborating to create a notebook eventually titled "Pigs, Plastic, and Politics." From Japan in the Edo period to colonial Pennsylvania to England during the Industrial Revolution through more recent events in the U.S. and Italy, the kids learn about the benefits and flaws of various recycling systems and what they can do to help the problem of plastic pollution. Charlie briefly falls into anger and despair, but Oliver helps her through it. No one bats an eye at the kids appearing out of nowhere. Readers will likely encounter new vocabulary, which is explained in text. The layout is easy to follow, with four or five panels on most pages and the occasional notebook page. Charlie has brown skin and dark brown hair in puffs, and Oliver has pale skin and dark hair and eyes. VERDICT This guide presents the scale of the problem of plastic trash as well as the solutions everyone--even kids--can work toward. Its appealing format, relatable characters, fun premise, and informative content make it an excellent choice for all collections.--Jenny Arch

Copyright 2023 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

"[A] must-read in science classes with environmental units."—School Library Connection

"Upbeat and optimistic. . . ."—Kirkus Reviews
Kate Wheeler
Kate Wheeler is a cartoonist originally from Seattle, Washington. Her work has been published in The Washington Post, The Seattle Weekly and The American Library Association Magazine. Kate loves storytelling and drawing, which is why she loves comics most of all. In her free time she enjoys playing with her two dogs, checking out a huge stack of books from the library or finding a new recipe involving fish sauce. Her favorite way to shop sustainably is to find hidden treasures in thrift stores.
Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9780823452279
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Holiday House
Publication date
August 01, 2023
Series
Books for a Better Earth
BISAC categories
JNF037020 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Science & Nature | Environmental Conservation & Protection
JNF065000 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Recycling & Green Living
JNF062030 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Comics & Graphic Novels | Science & Nature
Library of Congress categories
Time travel
Graphic novels
Recycling (Waste)
Cartoons and comics
Nonfiction comics
Recycling (Waste, etc.)
Sustainability
Time-travel comics
Comics (Graphic workd)

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