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ALMA AND HOW SHE GOT HER NAME by Juana Martinez-Neal

ALMA AND HOW SHE GOT HER NAME

by Juana Martinez-Neal ; illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal

Pub Date: April 10th, 2018
ISBN: 978-0-7636-9355-8
Publisher: Candlewick

Alma Sofia Esperanza José Pura Candela has a very long name, and she’s about to find out how she came to have it.

Alma is a cute little girl with the sweetest pair of striped red-and-white pants ever. She also happens to have a very long name—so long, in fact, that it never fits. Her father sits her down to tell her the story of her name, “Then you decide if it fits.” And so Alma learns about her grandmother Sofia; her great-grandmother Esperanza; her grandfather José; her great-aunt Pura; and her other grandmother Candela. And Alma? She learns Alma was picked just for her. “You will make your own story.” Peruvian-born Martinez-Neal never expresses it in the text, but the illustrations are filled with references to Peru, the country where Alma’s family comes from. Mostly monochromatic against a cream background, the illustrations—print transfers with graphite and colored pencils—are delightful, capturing the distinctive essences of Alma’s many namesakes. Alma is depicted as the color of the paper background, with pink cheeks and a black bob haircut. Whereas the story starts with Alma’s name written in a childish print on a piece of paper that needs an extra piece of paper taped to it, the story ends with Alma’s name in grand and elegant display types. That’s her name, and it fits her just right! A Spanish edition, Alma y cómo obtuvo su nombre, publishes simultaneously.

A celebration of identity, family and belonging.

(Picture book. 4-8)