Next book

LITTLE WARRIORS, BIG LIVES

Creative, encouraging verses about cancer patients accompanied by uneven illustrations.

Young cancer patients are celebrated in poetry in this debut picture book.

In five striking poems, Fausett captures the struggles of kids with cancer. The first, “Dear Cancer,” is addressed to the disease itself, with the child narrator declaring: “You’re not welcome here to stay, / Allow me to lead you on your way.” A youngster in a hospital gown follows the advice of the narrator in “Dance, Anyways.” Two young patients take a trip using their imaginations in “Journey.” A child describes learning things and gaining strength during the fight against cancer in “Good for Something.” The final evocative poem, “True Warrior,” equates scars with stars, claiming that all of the youngster’s triumphs against cancer are like footprints in a journey. Fausett’s rhythms are often syncopated, giving the lines of poetry an upbeat flow without a firm scansion. She frequently uses near-rhymes (lightly / mighty), and sometimes she turns phrases in inventive ways that may confuse younger readers (“embrace our strive”). The bold-hued digital art by Banerjee features several kids of different ethnicities as cancer patients; all feature nose tubes in a bright color attached to their faces. While there is an attempt to include Native Americans in the cast, the illustrator’s choice of clothing and feathers is stereotypical. One character wears a full headdress and has streaked paint on his cheeks, and a child sports two feathers sticking up from a headband.

Creative, encouraging verses about cancer patients accompanied by uneven illustrations.

Pub Date: Nov. 1, 2022

ISBN: 9781592111718

Page Count: 28

Publisher: Histria Kids

Review Posted Online: Dec. 3, 2022

Next book

THIS IS A SCHOOL

A full-hearted valentine.

A soaring panegyric to elementary school as a communal place to learn and grow.

“This is a kid,” Schu begins. “This is a kid in a class. This is a class in a hall….” If that class—possibly second graders, though they could be a year to either side of that—numbers only about a dozen in Jamison’s bright paintings, it makes up for that in diversity, with shiny faces of variously brown or olive complexion well outnumbering paler ones; one child using a wheelchair; and at least two who appear to be Asian. (The adult staff is likewise racially diverse.) The children are individualized in the art, but the author’s narrative is addressed more to an older set of readers as it runs almost entirely to collective nouns and abstract concepts: “We share. We help. / This is a community, growing.” Younger audiences will zero in on the pictures, which depict easily recognizable scenes of both individual and collective learning and play, with adults and classmates always on hand to help out or join in. Signs of conflict are unrealistically absent, but an occasional downcast look does add a bit of nuance to the general air of eager positivity on display. A sad face at an apartment window with a comment that “[s]ometimes something happens, and we can’t all be together” can be interpreted as an oblique reference to pandemic closings, but the central message here is that school is a physical space, not a virtual one, where learning and community happen. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A full-hearted valentine. (Picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: March 29, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5362-0458-2

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: March 29, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2022

Next book

TISHA AND THE BLOSSOMS

A sweet reminder to pause and ponder life’s everyday wonders.

A young girl models mindfulness as she savors each moment.

This charming and vibrant picture book opens in Tisha’s backyard, where she is reaching skyward as falling blossoms float toward her. Her joy and anticipation are disrupted by a series of “hurry up” commands from those around her, who prod her to rush for the school bus, attend an assembly, and make sure that she doesn’t miss lunch. The externally imposed directions conflict with Tisha’s natural curiosity, which compels her not only to “listen to the sounds” and to count the spots on a ladybug she finds during recess, but also to create connections between a book she finds about space and the space shuttle she imagines but cannot finish drawing because “it’s time to put the crayons away.” When Tisha requests “a little slowdown,” she and Mommy decide to walk home and play “How Many?” along the way; they also snuggle on a park bench and name all the pigeons. What began as a harried day ends on an idyllic note with a family picnic under flowering trees; when the wind blows, Tisha can catch a blossom at last. Artful and striking illustrations produce a multitude of visual textures that delineate individual blooms, sketch Tisha’s neighborhood, render colorful yet subtle details of characters and clothing, and deliver painterly impressions. Tisha and her family are tan-skinned with dark hair; her classmates are diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A sweet reminder to pause and ponder life’s everyday wonders. (Picture book. 5-7)

Pub Date: May 17, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5362-2198-5

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Candlewick

Review Posted Online: April 12, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2022

Close Quickview