Kirkus Reviews QR Code
FIRST TIMES by Charles Ghigna

FIRST TIMES

by Charles Ghigna ; illustrated by Lori Joy Smith

Pub Date: Oct. 31st, 2017
ISBN: 978-1-4598-1198-0
Publisher: Orca

On the childhood road to independence, first-time accomplishments are lauded as important milestones.

A brown-skinned sister and her lighter-skinned brother celebrate their individual first times for a variety of activities such as tying shoes, riding a bike, catching a ball, or swimming a lap while their white baby sibling mostly looks on. The childlike drawings of this round-headed, wide-eyed, multiracial family add to the simplicity of the narrative, which is written in a somewhat uneven rhyme. Each specific accomplishment is highlighted, the key word or words printed in a playful display type within each sentence. “My first run with a kite as it climbs to the sky. / My first wish on a star. My first butterfly.” (Here a butterfly lands on the baby’s head.) Whether helping with shopping, making dinner, taking care of a new dog, or reading independently, these sibs are proud to exclaim their growth with each new feat. The book ends a bit abruptly with an illustration of the children in a tent happily looking out without a last sentence to close the book with one cohesive statement. Nevertheless, the basic concepts will easily be recognizable by both those who have already achieved and those aspiring to attain each new skill or experience.

This celebration of maturation, an ever popular theme, is most notable for the diversity of its characters.

(Picture book. 3-6)