Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

Next book

CAKE, LEMONADE, AND SPRINKLES

A slight but positive story celebrating individuality.

Awards & Accolades

Our Verdict

  • Our Verdict
  • GET IT

A birthday girl learns to embrace her own personality in Hight’s picture book.

London is having a costume party for her birthday. All of her guests are very excited, but as they chatter about their outfits on the school bus, London is plagued by doubt. She can’t decide if she wants to be a ballerina or a birthday princess, which she thinks her mom would like. By the time she gets home, London is so visibly upset that her mother asks her if she’s sick. When she finds out what’s actually wrong, London’s mom provides her daughter with some invaluable advice: “You, my love, are one of a kind. Like a star in the sky, you’re a unique design. Your costume can be a celebration of you and your love of technology and science too.” Spurred on by this parental support, London leaps at the chance to become an astronaut for her birthday. This brief narrative effectively teaches young readers about the importance of being themselves. The story is sparse on character development—why is London so indecisive in the first place?—and has a somewhat abrupt ending. The lively illustrations (credited to “Whimsical Designs by CJ”) are full of color and are charmingly exuberant—much like London herself, who is portrayed as having light brown skin and purple afro puffs.

A slight but positive story celebrating individuality.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: 9798986333250

Page Count: -

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: Oct. 7, 2024

Next book

BETTER THAN A TOUCHDOWN

Earnest and well meaning but not quite a touchdown.

In Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Hurts’ motivational picture book, a youngster rebounds from disappointment.

As Jalen heads off on his first day of school, he daydreams about joining the football team, but his friend Trey soon breaks the bad news. The garden club needed more space for vegetables, so the football field was used for planting. There will be no football this year. Jalen is despondent, but his teachers Mrs. Lee and Mr. Barry and bodega owner Mr. Muhammad offer guidance that spurs him and his friends into positive action. They work to flip a nearby empty lot into a football field, with Jalen echoing his mentors’ adages. Once the field is complete, Jalen feels a swell of pride in his and his friends’ work. While the idea of kids working together to effect change is a laudable one, the bland, wordy storytelling won’t inspire young people or hold their attention. Tired, cliched inspirational comments peppered throughout often slow down the narrative, and many adult readers will find the premise—a school dropping a high-interest sports program in favor of a community garden—wildly unrealistic. Though the illustrations are colorful, with a Disney Junior charm, strange stylistic choices, such as signs with odd combinations of scribbles instead of letters, give them an unpolished look. Like Hurts, Jalen is Black; his community is diverse.

Earnest and well meaning but not quite a touchdown. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: March 10, 2026

ISBN: 9798217040308

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Flamingo Books

Review Posted Online: Nov. 22, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2026

Next book

GRUMPY MONKEY

Though Jim may have been grumpy because a chimp’s an ape and not a monkey, readers will enjoy and maybe learn from his...

It’s a wonderful day in the jungle, so why’s Jim Panzee so grumpy?

When Jim woke up, nothing was right: "The sun was too bright, the sky was too blue, and bananas were too sweet." Norman the gorilla asks Jim why he’s so grumpy, and Jim insists he’s not. They meet Marabou, to whom Norman confides that Jim’s grumpy. When Jim denies it again, Marabou points out that Jim’s shoulders are hunched; Jim stands up. When they meet Lemur, Lemur points out Jim’s bunchy eyebrows; Jim unbunches them. When he trips over Snake, Snake points out Jim’s frown…so Jim puts on a grimacelike smile. Everyone has suggestions to brighten his mood: dancing, singing, swinging, swimming…but Jim doesn’t feel like any of that. He gets so fed up, he yells at his animal friends and stomps off…then he feels sad about yelling. He and Norman (who regrets dancing with that porcupine) finally just have a sit and decide it’s a wonderful day to be grumpy—which, of course, makes them both feel a little better. Suzanne Lang’s encouragement to sit with your emotions (thus allowing them to pass) is nearly Buddhist in its take, and it will be great bibliotherapy for the crabby, cranky, and cross. Oscar-nominated animator Max Lang’s cartoony illustrations lighten the mood without making light of Jim’s mood; Jim has comically long arms, and his facial expressions are quite funny.

Though Jim may have been grumpy because a chimp’s an ape and not a monkey, readers will enjoy and maybe learn from his journey. (Picture book. 4-8)

Pub Date: May 15, 2018

ISBN: 978-0-553-53786-4

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: Feb. 18, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2018

Close Quickview