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I AM AMAZING!

An uplifting tale that will convince all kids that they, too, are super.

Ayaan loves being a superhero.

On the playground, Ayaan, who has dark brown skin and black hair, runs from friend to friend with his cape trailing behind him, helping however he can. When Aria needs a push on the swings, he is there. When Elijah and Atara need help scaling the rock wall, he is happy to lend a hand. But when he hears David and Brian (brown-haired with dark skin and black-haired with light skin, respectively) laughing at him (“You don’t look like a superhero to me”), Ayaan removes his cape and loses his fire. After school, his father, who has dark brown skin and long black locs, can tell that Ayaan is upset. When Ayaan tells him why, his father says, “Even though your friends may not have seen many superheroes that look like you, superheroes are everywhere,” and he explains that “anyone can be a superhero, including you.” He asks Ayaan what makes him amazing, and Ayaan comes up with several things—he’s kind, brave, and helpful—before donning his cape again. This short, simple tale is a strong social-emotional read-aloud. The illustrations are bright, cartoonlike, and engaging, and Ayaan is an appealing protagonist who faces the unkindness of his peers but rises above it. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

An uplifting tale that will convince all kids that they, too, are super. (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: July 26, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-593-32732-6

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Flamingo Books

Review Posted Online: May 10, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2022

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WAY PAST WORRIED

Though books on childhood anxiety are numerous, it is worth making space on the shelf for this one.

Brock may be dressed like a superhero, but he sure doesn’t feel like one, as social anxieties threaten to rain on his fun    .

Juan’s superhero-themed birthday party is about to start, but Brock is feeling trepidatious about attending without his brother as his trusty sidekick. His costume does not fit quite right, and he is already running late, and soon Brock is “way past worried.” When he arrives at the party he takes some deep breaths but is still afraid to jump in and so hides behind a tree. Hiding in the same tree is the similarly nervous Nelly, who’s new to the neighborhood. Through the simple act of sharing their anxieties, the children find themselves ready to face their fears. This true-to-life depiction of social anxiety is simply but effectively rendered. While both Nelly and Brock try taking deep breathes to calm their anxieties without success, it is the act of sharing their worries in a safe space with someone who understands that ultimately brings relief. With similar themes, Brock’s tale would make a lovely companion for Tom Percival’s Ruby Finds a Worry (2019) on social-emotional–development bookshelves. Brock is depicted with black hair and tan skin, Nelly presents White, and peers at the party appear fairly diverse.

Though books on childhood anxiety are numerous, it is worth making space on the shelf for this one. (Picture book. 4-6)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-8075-8686-0

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Whitman

Review Posted Online: July 13, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2020

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THIS BOOK IS GRAY

Low grade.

A gray character tries to write an all-gray book.

The six primary and secondary colors are building a rainbow, each contributing the hue of their own body, and Gray feels forlorn and left out because rainbows contain no gray. So Gray—who, like the other characters, has a solid, triangular body, a doodle-style face, and stick limbs—sets off alone to create “the GRAYest book ever.” His book inside a book shows a peaceful gray cliff house near a gray sea with gentle whitecaps; his three gray characters—hippo, wolf, kitten—wait for their arc to begin. But then the primaries arrive and call the gray scene “dismal, bleak, and gloomy.” The secondaries show up too, and soon everyone’s overrunning Gray’s creation. When Gray refuses to let White and Black participate, astute readers will note the flaw: White and black (the colors) had already been included in the early all-gray spreads. Ironically, Gray’s book within a book displays calm, passable art while the metabook’s unsubtle illustrations and sloppy design make for cramped and crowded pages that are too busy to hold visual focus. The speech-bubble dialogue’s snappy enough (Blue calls people “dude,” and there are puns). A convoluted moral muddles the core artistic question—whether a whole book can be gray—and instead highlights a trite message about working together.

Low grade. (glossary) (Picture book. 4-6)

Pub Date: Dec. 1, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-5420-4340-3

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Two Lions

Review Posted Online: July 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2019

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