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COUNT ON ME

If readers aren’t math-curious at the start, they will be by the end.

A young child explains a love of math and how it shapes the world.

Finding one’s passion is no easy feat, even (perhaps especially) when surrounded by everyone else’s. Dad loves to paint, Mom thrills at entomology, and a brother excels at music, but none of those quite fit. Neither does acting or dancing or cooking or singing or sports—all worthy activities but none of them the stuff of passion for the determined narrator. When everything has been tried, the protagonist is left with the simple truth—the one thing this child likes the most is math. Tanco unhurriedly unspools the protagonist’s passion as the text (occasionally punctuated with new vocabulary) notes how thoroughly the world is immersed in math, whether it’s in the form of geometric shapes on the playground, group problems at the dinner table, or paper-airplane trajectories. With each page turn, the lens and framework of math as a way to see the world takes shape. Without softening or hiding basic (but still complex) mathematical concepts, Tanco’s open, loose-lined illustrations offer visual dimension and definition, bridging, for instance, the unfamiliar concept of concentric circles with the everyday occurrence of water ripples. Further information can be found in a visual glossary. The narrator has light brown skin and a mass of brown, kinky curls; Mom has a similar look, and Dad presents white.

If readers aren’t math-curious at the start, they will be by the end. (Picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: June 11, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-7352-6575-2

Page Count: 48

Publisher: Tundra Books

Review Posted Online: March 30, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2019

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BEING YOU

Heartfelt content for children who need to feel seen.

Words addressed to children aimed at truth-telling, encouraging, and inspiring are accompanied by pictures of children of color going about their days.

“This story is about you,” the narrator opens, as a black boy looks up toward readers, a listening expression on his face. A multiracial group of children romp in a playground to encouraging words: “you are… / a dancer / a singer / in charge of the game.” Then comes a warning about the “whispers” out in the world that “tell you who you are / But only you and love decide.” There is advice about what to do when you “think there is nowhere safe”: “Watch a bird soar / and think, / Me too.” It asks readers to wonder: “If there was a sign on your chest / what would it say?” Children argue and show frustration and anger for reasons unclear to readers, then they hold up signs about themselves, such as “I am powerful” and “I am talented.” A girl looks hurt, and a boy looks “tough” until someone finds them “sitting there wondering / when the sky will blue.” While the words are general, the pictures specify a teacher, who is brown-skinned with straight black hair, as one who “can see you.” While young readers may find the wording unusual, even obscure in places, the nurturing message will not be lost.

Heartfelt content for children who need to feel seen. (Picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2018

ISBN: 978-1-68446-021-2

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Capstone Young Readers

Review Posted Online: Aug. 13, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2018

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MILLIE FLEUR'S POISON GARDEN

No poison here; just a garden of delights about someone who improves things in a unique fashion.

A girl plants a fantastical idea.

Millie Fleur La Fae and her mom move to Garden Glen, where all the houses are “flawless” and identical—except theirs. Located on the edge of town, it’s run-down and scruffy. Millie Fleur loves it, but something’s missing. Fortunately, Mom brought seeds from Millie Fleur’s old garden, which Millie Fleur plants immediately. They grow quickly, wildly, and weirdly, bearing names like Fanged Fairy Moss and Sore Toothwort. Garden Glen’s Rosebud Club members are displeased; the club’s president dubs them “poisonous.” They’re not, but, as Mom explains, “Some people are scared of things that are different.” Millie Fleur loves her “wild, weird little garden” and invites her classmates to see it. Everyone visits the garden, including the teacher. All concur: Millie Fleur’s garden is “wonderfully weird.” Eventually, thanks to Garden Glen’s Youth Plant and Seed Swap, bits of her garden work their way into other town gardens; soon, they’re no longer identical, making Garden Glen “a truly one-of-a-kind place.” This charming, low-key tale celebrates those who unabashedly find unconventional things exciting and reassures readers that it’s OK to have off-the-beaten-track interests. The digital illustrations brim with fun; readers will be amused by the plants’ bizarre appearances and names. Millie Fleur (who’s reminiscent of Wednesday Addams) and her mom are pale-skinned; background characters are racially diverse.

No poison here; just a garden of delights about someone who improves things in a unique fashion. (note about snapdragons and spider plants, author’s note) (Picture book. 5-8)

Pub Date: July 2, 2024

ISBN: 9781339023274

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Orchard/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: April 20, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2024

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