An ABC book that challenges gender norms.
Each page depicts a child who embodies a different characteristic, usually one not stereotypically associated with their gender: For B: “Mohammad likes to do makeup and get beautiful with his sister.” For M: “Ximena is mighty and strong. She lifted her friend’s bike when it got stuck in the mud!” The message that kids can and should reject rigid gender roles is important, but the book misses the mark. The words chosen to represent each letter include adjectives, verbs, adverbs, and nouns, and their placement within the text is random—sometimes toward the end of a sentence, other times in the middle—which makes the alphabet-book connection feel tenuous. Eye-catching, at times visually overwhelming, illustrations feature a strongly ’70s-inspired psychedelic aesthetic and palette, but several images are perplexing. On one page, a child rides a motor scooter instead of a kick scooter—without a helmet. On another, a child using a wheelchair is depicted teetering dangerously on a winner’s podium that is not wheelchair accessible. Wordy, at times clunky, and somewhat didactic, the text likely won’t engage readers, though it does offer a good starting point to discussions of gender. The characters are diverse in terms of gender identity and expression (some use they/them pronouns), ability, and race. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Offers a much-needed takeaway—if kids can make it through to the end.
(Picture book. 4-7)