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A scene from the Becoming a Good Creature video.
A scene from the Becoming a Good Creature video.

If you happen to tune into New Hampshire Public Television you may catch Sy talking about Becoming a Good Creature. This brief film — 1 minute, 30 seconds — is running between programs. Watch it here.

Photo by Tia Strombeck from Condor Comeback.
Photo by Tia Strombeck from Condor Comeback.

Hometown Vulture. Condor Comeback is in the Santa Barbara News-Press, the hometown paper for the project which is restoring condors to the wild. Dr. Estelle Sandhaus, the Santa Barbara Zoo’s director of conservation and science, is in charge of the condor project. She stars in Condor Comeback.

Thurber alongside Seacoast Bark magazine
Thurber alongside Seacoast Bark magazine
Seacoast Bark magazine spread featuring Sy Montgomery
Seacoast Bark magazine spread featuring Sy Montgomery

Seacoast Bark. What dogs “in the know” are reading right now! (This issue featuring you-know-who and his person.)


Lone Star Octo. Sy was interviewed by Jim McKeown for his show Likely Stories on KWBU, “Heart of Texas Public Radio.” Jim gives The Soul of an Octopus “8 tentacles” (out of 8, we assume). Listen here.

A big thank you to the good folks at The Arts Fuse, a fabulous online guide to the arts in New England, for featuring How to be a Good Creature in its March edition. Read the other excellent recommendations here.

Fan mail from Spain

Fan mail from Spain
Fan mail from Spain.
A Double Honor. The nonfiction committee of the Missouri Association of School Librarians has chosen two of Sy’s books for their lists of top twenty best nonfiction books. Condor Comeback is on the list for grades 3 to 5, and The Magnificent Migration is on the list for 6th to 8th graders.

Sy visits with the Turtle Rescue League

The Dutch translation of The Soul of an Octopus has been published in the Netherlands.
The Dutch translation of The Soul of an Octopus has been published in the Netherlands.
The Dutch translation of The Soul of an Octopus has been published in the Netherlands.


Sy visits with her buddy Fire Chief, a snapping turtle
Photo by turtle artist extraordinaire Matt Patterson

Researching her next book, Sy visits with her buddy Fire Chief, a snapping turtle who is in rehab at a turtle hospital. “Fire Chief looks as big as a dinosaur, but he’s gentle as a puppy,” says Sy. “Here we are at Turtle Rescue League doing physical therapy to help strengthen his legs. He was injured when a truck ran him over.”

“Thank you, Matt Patterson for the photo, and Alexxia Bell, Natasha Nowick and Michaela Conder for the great care all the turtles get at Turtle Rescue League.”


A scene from the Becoming a Good Creature video.
A scene from the Becoming a Good Creature video.

Becoming a bestseller. On Sunday, January 17, Becoming a Good Creature will nuzzle its way on to The New York Times Bestseller List for Children’s Picture Books at number 8. Sy thanks Rebecca Green for her superb illustrations and the Salt Project for its beautiful video. If you haven’t seen it, check it out here.


The Well School in Peterborough

Sketch made atThe Well School in Peterborough

“I learned animals matter.” Sy recently visited The Well School in Peterborough, New Hampshire, via Google Meet. She spoke to two groups of students: Kindergarten through the 4th grade, and then 5th through 8th grade. They had questions about almost every animal on earth, and – no surprise – Sy has met many, many of these animals. They learned about sloths, tigers, sharks, Sy’s dog Thurber, and most of all they learned, as one student said, that “animals matter.”


The Infinite Eternal Ocean of Energy
Oil and acrylic on stretched canvas by Megan Dalziel
The Infinite Eternal Ocean of Energy
Oil and acrylic on stretched canvas by Megan Dalziel

Inspired. After reading The Soul of an Octopus, artist Megan Dalziel created this stunning painting showing how the wonder of consciousness connects all life. The combination of an octopus with an extinct triceratops represents the vast diversity of life that has existed on earth. Sy is honored that her book inspired this thoughtful artwork.

Lisa Dabek has spent her life studying tree kangaroos

Tree Kangaroos: Science and Conservation

Just published. Lisa Dabek has spent her life studying tree kangaroos. Dabek is the senior conservation scientist and director of the Tree Kangaroo Conservation Program at Woodland Park Zoo. And now she has edited an essential book about these beguiling marsupials. Tree Kangaroos: Science and Conservation has twenty seven chapters by the world’s top tree kangaroo researchers, with a final chapter by Sy.


Sy under the sea studying good creatures. Illustration by Rebecca Green
Sy under the sea studying good creatures. Illustration by Rebecca Green

Lucky wrists. “In northern Thailand, a tribal shaman once foretold [Sy’s] future by looking at the pattern of blue veins on her wrists. He said that her wrists ‘were the luckiest wrists he had ever seen.’ Indeed.” Read about the adventures behind Becoming a Good Creature in this charming, short interview in New Hampshire magazine.

Win a book. Do Good. Help wombats and turtles. Deborah Furchtgott writes the lively blog, The Children’s Bookroom. She’s a mother, and a Harvard PhD (in medieval poetry) who is “passionate about children’s literature.” Sy is an “influential author” in her house. And in honor of that The Children’s Bookroom is holding a Thanking Good Creatures giveaway. She writes: “If you donate to one of the following charities (I encourage at least a $10 donation) and email me proof of donation at deborah.furchtgott@gmail.com then I will enter you to win one of these gorgeous books. Deadline: December 31, 2020. I will draw two names at random in the first days of January, 2021, and ship them out the first week of January. I will ship worldwide!

“To win Becoming a Good Creature, please donate to Sleepy Burrows Wombat Sanctuary near Gundaroo in Australia; the donation page is here.

“To win How to Be a Good Creature, please donate to the Turtle Rescue League here in Massachusetts; the donation page is here.

So, please! Consider making a donation, send me a note with which charity you supported so I know which book you’re entered to win. Again:

  1. Donate at least $10 to one of the above charities by December 31, 2020
  2. Email me with your receipt and chosen charity/book
  3. I will notify you if you win in the first days of January and ship your book shortly afterwards!

“Thank you so much for helping to make the world a better place! And thanks so much to Sy Montgomery and Rebecca Green for their work and for showing all of us, kids and adults, concrete ways to work with our fellow creatures to be better ourselves.”

Sea Turtle photo by Sy Montgomery

Sea Turtle Rescue Accomplished. With colleagues from Turtle Rescue League, wildlife artist Matt Patterson and Sy have returned from a 10-mile nighttime patrol along Cape Cod’s stormy beaches. They rescued five highly endangered, cold-stunned Kemp’s Ridley sea turtles. Matt dragged the cold turtles by sled to Audubon’s Wellfleet facility. They will be transfered to New England Aquarium’s Quincy marine animal care facility. All are expected to fully recover.


The Good Good Pig is now in its 21st printing, adding 3000 more copies. There are now more than 120,000 paperbacks in print.

It's beginning to look like Christmas at Sy's house.
It’s beginning to look like Christmas at Sy’s house.

Author and educator Mary Bleckwehl has chosen Becoming a Good Creature as one of her Top 10 Books for 2020. Check out the other great picture books she loves here.

Sy is a character in someone else’s novel! In a German work of fiction titled The Octopus’ Ninth Arm, Sy appears in a chapter in which, with the help of an octopus friend at New England Aquarium, she meets Vladimir Putin and… well, you’ll have to read the book (in German) to find out.

It debuted at number two on the Der Spiegel’s bestseller list. Watch out Putin, the octos are coming.


Becoming a Good Creature is a Number 1 Amazon bestseller

Becoming a Good Creature is a Number 1 Amazon bestseller in children’s science biography. And:

  • Kirkus Reviews picks Good Creature as one of the 20 best middle-grade books for 2020.
  • The National Science Teachers’ Association and the Center for Books for Children has selected Condor Comeback as one of the Outstanding Science Trade books of the year.
  • It’s been a good year for good creatures.

Sy is delighted that the prestigious Science magazine gave Condor Comeback a wonderful review.

And if you missed the segment on condors on New England Chronicle last week, you can watch it here

The Soul of an Octopus arrives in Ukraine.
The Soul of an Octopus arrives in Ukraine.

Sy spoke via Zoom with fourth graders

Elizabeth Bullock's portrait of the “Queen of Nature”Sy spoke via Zoom with the fourth graders of PS 163 in New York City who had read The Tarantula Scientist. They peppered Sy with smart questions for an hour. Elizabeth Bullock, age 9, created this portrait of the “Queen of Nature” to commemorate the occasion. Could this be Sy’s new author photo?

Sy talked with Paul Samuel Dolman, host of the podcast What Matters Most, to discuss Becoming a Good Creature. Listen here.

Condor Comeback is on the Longlist for 2021 AAAS/Subaru SB&F Prize for Excellence in Science Books in the Middle Grades Science.

Sy is sporting these festive octo masks thanks to a reader

Ahtapotin Ruhu. Turkish readers will soon be reading this translation of The Soul of an OctopusAhtapotin Ruhu. Turkish readers will soon be reading this translation of The Soul of an Octopus.


Sy is sporting these festive octo masks thanks to a readerSy is sporting these festive octo masks thanks to a reader.


Condor Comeback is a one of Publishers Weekly’s Best Books of 2020

Another good creature gets behind Sy’s new book.
Another good creature gets behind Sy’s new book.

Sy enjoyed talking to the blog Rover about Becoming a Good Creature. Read the short interview here.

Becoming a Good Creature is one of 17 children’s titles selected as a Powell’s Pick of the Season.


A voracious reader visits the River Bookshop in Amherstburg, Ontario.
A voracious reader visits the River Bookshop in Amherstburg, Ontario.

In honor of Octopus Month (October, of course) OctoKing Warren Carlyle again called upon Sy to address the OctoNation, which is the world’s biggest octopus fan club. Watch the octo-chat on Facebook here.

Becoming a Good Creature introductory film

Becoming a Good Creature. Watch this fabulous short – minute and a half — introduction to the new book filmed by the amazing Salt Project.


Becoming a Good Creature

Pre-order Becoming a Good Creature from our wonderful local Toadstool Bookshop.


Condor Comeback. Chronicle, Boston’s WCVB-TV’s long running show, visited Sy to create this fine introduction to Sy’s new book. There’s also plenty of Tia Strombeck’s stunning images of everyone’s favorite vulture, and star turns by Thurber, the snapping-turtle extraordinaire Fire Chief, and even the late, beloved pig Christopher Hogwood. Watch it here.

The bear who sniffed a sleeping homeowner’s foot, a baby condor who survived wildfire, and the hummingbirds and monarch butterflies to watch for in your yard – All these showed up in Sy’s discussion on yesterday’s Afternoon Zoo on WGBH radio — along with why people are painting their cow’s butts with eyes. Listen Here:

The Washington Post tells kids about Condor Comeback. Read it here.

Becoming a Good Creature is one of Amazon’s monthly picks for the best children’s nonfiction in September.

Sy talks baby turtles, friendly sharks, sexy frogs, and murder hornets

Beach reading. Willow, dog about town, studies up for her next swim in Norway Pond.
Beach reading. Willow, dog about town, studies up for her next swim in Norway Pond.
The Condor Comeback book is out and this reader likes what he sees.
The Condor Comeback book is out and this reader likes what he sees.


Watch Sy and Tia talk about the new Condor Comeback book as they show cool pictures of condors here.

Sy talks baby turtles, friendly sharks, sexy frogs, and murder hornets on the Afternoon Zoo on WGBH. Listen here:

New editions. Journey of the Pink Dolphins in a German translation. And everyone’s favorite octopus in a forthcoming Danish translation.

Journey of the Pink Dolphins in a German translation
Journey of the Pink Dolphins in a German translation
The Soul of an Octopus  in Danish translation
The Soul of an Octopus in Danish translation


Maria Curcic Fine Art

Listening to the audiobook of Soul of an Octopus while recovering from an eye injury, artist Maria Curcic fell in love with Athena, Octavia, Kali and Karma. In their honor she created the painting seen above. Check out her work on Facebook: Maria Curcic Fine Art. And on Instagram: @curcicfineart. Thank you, Maria.


The Korean edition of Tamed and Untamed: Close Encounters of the Animal Kind
The Korean edition of Tamed and Untamed: Close Encounters of the Animal Kind

Just published. The Korean edition of Tamed and Untamed: Close Encounters of the Animal Kind by Sy and Elizabeth Marshall Thomas. Don’t let this cat’s stare put you off.

Becoming a Good Creature activity guide

Illustration by Rebecca Green from Becoming a Good Creature
Illustration by Rebecca Green from Becoming a Good Creature

Becoming a Good Creature will be published this September, but until then the publisher, Houghton Mifflin, has created this cool activity guide. See it here.


crafty critter drawn on this envelope from a reader in Valencia, Spain

Sy gets wonderful letters from readers. We liked the look of this crafty critter drawn on this envelope from a reader in Valencia, Spain.


Condor Comeback

The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books loves Condor Comeback: “It’s a wide-focus take on an environmental success, tempered with patience, the odd condor bite (Montgomery gets nipped helping out with the exams), and setbacks (the first young condors released into the wild were basically adolescent vandals), but ultimately it’s a story of unusual triumph for a species so close to extinction…. Youngsters will be galvanized by the possibilities of this kind of scientific work and keen to find ways to join in.”

And so does ibookdaily.com: “Montgomery’s powerful prose does justice to these ancient, sociable, and elegant creatures. Complete with world-class, full-color photography… Condor Comeback is an inspiring story of groundbreaking science, perseverance, and cooperation.”

The Catch of the Day — on Your Wall. Joe Higgins makes prints of fish “the old-fashioned way, using a technique called gyotaku – applying ink to a fish, placing rice paper over it, and pressing,” says Yankee magazine in a recent tour of artists. One of Higgins’ inspirations is The Soul of an Octopus. That’s one of his prints above. You can see more at: fishedimpressions.comThe Catch of the Day — on Your Wall. Joe Higgins makes prints of fish “the old-fashioned way, using a technique called gyotaku – applying ink to a fish, placing rice paper over it, and pressing,” says Yankee magazine in a recent tour of artists. One of Higgins’ inspirations is The Soul of an Octopus. You can see his art at: fishedimpressions.com

Octo in the City of Angels

Octo in the City of Angels. The Soul of an Octopus has returned to another West Coast bestseller list. Sy’s octo book is number nine on The Los Angeles Times’ nonfiction paperback bestseller list for May 31.

Pioneer Works, an artist-run cultural center in Brooklyn

Two years ago, Sy had the good fortune to speak at Pioneer Works, an artist-run cultural center in Brooklyn. They now have a great new media site, The Broadcast, and have created a series of commemorative bandanas — including this one designed by Andrea Lauer featuring an octopus brain and Sy’s signature. Here’s where you can see (and order) the bandana, listen to Sy’s talk, and read a recent interview.


Sy Montgomery in The Caterpillar Lab in Marlborough, NH

Yes, that’s one big bug. Meet Jeannie, a Malaysian jungle nymph. Though she’s not a caterpillar herself, she lives at The Caterpillar Lab in Marlborough, New Hampshire, along with thousands of awesome larvae of butterflies and moths. Sy enjoyed her visit with Sam Jaffee. The lab is closed to the public at this time. Check out their Facebook page.

As part of her research for two new books, Sy is volunteering with the Turtle Rescue League. When a mother snapper nested just inches from a big parking lot, Sy was dispatched to excavate eggs so they could be incubated, hatched in captivity, and returned in the wild. She dug up 31 eggs. Just a couple yards away, turtle artist extraordinaire Matt Patterson was digging up eight painted turtle eggs. Those, too, will be incubated, hatched, and returned to the wild as young turtles ready to start their lives.
The wonderful citizen-science group Earthwatch has compiled their researchers’ favorite science and nature books. The list that includes How to be a Good Creature:

‘I was first introduced to Sy’s incredible writing when I picked up The Soul of an Octopus years ago,’ says Alix Morris, Earthwatch’s director of communications. ‘I was riveted. The way she explores the consciousness of creatures is profound, reminding us how much we still have to learn about the world around us.’

“In the opening of her book How to Be a Good Creature, Montgomery attributes her impressive career as a science writer and naturalist to Earthwatch, and details her first expedition following emus in the Australian Outback. ‘Sy shows us how much we can learn from creatures, how to see and hear the wild world in new ways,and how to better understand and appreciate our place in this universe. Combine this with a heavy dose of humor and poetic prose and you have yourself a fantastic read.’

See Earthwatch’s other picks here.

Spanish publication of How to be a Good Creature

Thurber visits Spain – via video. To mark the Spanish publication of How to be a Good Creature, Sy reads a chapter about Thurber, as we see many of his puppy photos with Spanish subtitles: “Sy Montgomery nos habla de Thurber, su border collie, una historia de Cómo ser una buena criatura.” Watch it here.


Window art by twelve-year-old Kaia M. from Plainfield, Illinois

Octo Art. Twelve-year-old Kaia M. from Plainfield, Illinois, created this window art after reading The Soul of an Octopus with her mom. With her art, her mom wrote, Kaia honors Athena, Octavia and Kali from the book. Thank you, Kaia!

Cephalo-Ed is a work of love and devotion. Gary started this You Tube channel. He’s been studying cephalopods since he was 3 years old when he first saw a Giant Pacific Octopus in a book. It was “unique and exquisite.” He was inspired right then to learn everything he could about octopuses. “They are truly one of the most magnificent animals in the world,” says Gary. And so, by and by, he read The Soul of an Octopus and interviewed Sy, who also loves these “most magnificent animals.” Watch the interview here.

School Library Journal loves Condor Comeback: “Like many of Montgomery’s nonfiction titles in the series, this recent entry does an excellent job of incorporating facts and narrative information about an animal not typically covered in stand-alone titles. The engaging call-to-action message is paired with gorgeous photographs that immerse readers in the condors’ world.”

A great Mother’s Day story

“The California Condor’s stunning and fragile existence swoops into focus in the latest Scientists in the Field title,” says Publishers Weekly in a starred review. “Though the condor’s future remains tenuous, Montgomery’s compelling page-turner inspires optimism.”

RadiolabOctomom. Radiolab has a great Mother’s Day story: “In 2007, Bruce Robison’s robot submarine stumbled across an octopus settling in to brood her eggs. It seemed like a small moment. But as he went back to visit her, month after month, what began as a simple act of motherhood became a heroic feat that has never been equaled by any known species on Earth.” Sy has a small role in the show as she describes the courtship and mating of octopuses.

Critters Down Under. Sy talked about emus, octopuses and other Good Creatures on Australia’s venerable public radio show, Uncommon Sense. Listen here.

Soul of an Octopus has returned to the bestseller lists. It is number seven on the Boston Globe’s list of nonfiction paperback bestsellers for the week of May 3.

Homeschooled artists Henley, 3, and Charlie, 5

Octo-school. Homeschooling her four kids, Melissa Tuttle of Santa Barbara used Soul of an Octopus for her weekly lesson plans. Among the results is this fine illustration of an episode in the book, executed jointly by artists Henley, 3, and Charlie, 5.


 Condor Comeback

Kirkus gives Condor Comeback a starred review: “Montgomery, no stranger to science in the field” joins the “ongoing California fieldwork in the form of condor checkups. These birds are still so endangered that wildlife specialists attempt to recapture each condor living in the wild every year, to check on its health and tracking devices. In an immediate, present-tense narrative, the writer describes the details of these checkups and some of the hazards: While holding birds, she was pooped on and bitten. They visit a biologist watching a nest site and see a new fledgling. After readers are thoroughly engaged with the birds, the writer steps back to describe continuing dangers…. She touches on the effects of wildfires in the birds’ neighborhoods; visits another nest watch; and talks with a tribal educator with the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians, who revere the condors and are especially interested in their return…. Close-up and long-range photos enliven every page…. Hopeful news in the natural world.”

Condor Comeback will be published in July.

Why did the amphibian cross the road?

Why did the amphibian cross the road? Sy was out on a warm, rainy April night that was perfect for salamandering. She joined a small brigade to help eight species of amphibians safely cross the road. Since the gorgeous spotted salamanders can live for 20 years, that’s a lot of life we were privileged to save.
Sy sent greetings to her Spanish publishers by talking about book, Spell of a Tiger, which has been translated into Spanish. Watch her short video here and test out your Spanish by reading the subtitles.

Graham Patterson's giant octopus chalk drawing

Your friendly neighborhood octopus. Fayetteville, Arkansas, artist Graham Patterson has drawn a giant octopus in the street to help cheer up his neighbors during quarantine. Thanks to Dustin Bartholomew of the Fayetteville Flyer and Octo Nation for sharing this Octo Art.

Inky’s Amazing Win. 8,169 students in grades 3 to 5 from 105 Rhode Island schools and libraries have voted, and the results are in: Inky’s Amazing Escape, with illustrations by Amy Schimler-Safford, won the 2020 Rhode Island Children’s Book Award. The breakdown of the vote, and the other great titles nominated, can be found here.