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DAZZLIN' DOLLY

THE SONGWRITING, HIT-SINGING, GUITAR-PICKING DOLLY PARTON

A new generation will understand why we will always love this iconic singer/songwriter.

A title brimming with love for a favorite country music star.

Given Dolly Parton’s philanthropic efforts with Imagination Library, it’s especially fitting to see her profiled by a writer and an illustrator who have ample experience creating picture-book biographies for young readers. Slade’s text includes quotes from Parton and adopts a down-home voice for the narration as she returns to Dolly’s Tennessee roots to tell her rags-to-riches coming-of-age story. Throughout, Fotheringham’s digital illustrations ground the text with a realistic style that never caricatures the singer, who has frequently been subjected to mockery over her appearance. While the book focuses mainly on Parton’s youth and the very beginnings of her career with her early radio performances and an appearance at the Grand Ole Opry at 13, backmatter gives more detail about her successes and discusses how Parton has used her fame and fortune to help others. Fotheringham incorporates symbols and motifs (butterflies and red shoes, for example) that are important to Parton’s career or figure prominently in her lyrics, which will delight those familiar with her catalog. Background characters are racially diverse. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A new generation will understand why we will always love this iconic singer/songwriter. (Picture book. 3-7)

Pub Date: Sept. 20, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-63592-841-9

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Calkins Creek/Astra Books for Young Readers

Review Posted Online: July 26, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2022

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ROSA PARKS

From the Little People, BIG DREAMS series

It’s a bit sketchy of historical detail, but it’s coherent, inspirational, and engaging without indulging in rapturous...

A first introduction to the iconic civil rights activist.

“She was very little and very brave, and she always tried to do what was right.” Without many names or any dates, Kaiser traces Parks’ life and career from childhood to later fights for “fair schools, jobs, and houses for black people” as well as “voting rights, women’s rights and the rights of people in prison.” Though her refusal to change seats and the ensuing bus boycott are misleadingly presented as spontaneous acts of protest, young readers will come away with a clear picture of her worth as a role model. Though recognizable thanks to the large wire-rimmed glasses Parks sports from the outset as she marches confidently through Antelo’s stylized illustrations, she looks childlike throughout (as characteristic of this series), and her skin is unrealistically darkened to match the most common shade visible on other African-American figures. In her co-published Emmeline Pankhurst (illustrated by Ana Sanfelippo), Kaiser likewise simplistically implies that Great Britain led the way in granting universal women’s suffrage but highlights her subject’s courageous quest for justice, and Isabel Sánchez Vegara caps her profile of Audrey Hepburn (illustrated by Amaia Arrazola) with the moot but laudable claim that “helping people across the globe” (all of whom in the pictures are dark-skinned children) made Hepburn “happier than acting or dancing ever had.” All three titles end with photographs and timelines over more-detailed recaps plus at least one lead to further information.

It’s a bit sketchy of historical detail, but it’s coherent, inspirational, and engaging without indulging in rapturous flights of hyperbole. (Picture book/biography. 5-7)

Pub Date: Sept. 7, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-78603-018-4

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Frances Lincoln

Review Posted Online: May 9, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2017

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SINGING IN THE RAIN

Raindrops are delightful and danceable musical melodies.

Movie happiness is now picture-book joy.

The title song from the classic 1952 movie musical is a song-and-dance salute to joie de vivre—as is this book version. It opens with a cheerful double-page spread of a brown-skinned child in perfectly matched yellow rain gear perched on a lamppost as musical notes in the same cheerful yellow stand out against a blue rain-splattered background. Homage to Gene Kelly? Of course! On the following pages, children in equally colorful rainy-day outfits join in the fun as they dance and march along. They watch from the observation deck of the Empire State Building as clouds fill the sky and the same bright yellow notes appear. Close-ups of the smiling, multiracial cast follow as they watch flowers grow or a reflection in a puddle and then happily splash away to other landscapes filled with tropical birds and lush green foliage. Sing the lyrics or recite the words “based on the song” and have a really good time. Hopgood’s digitally rendered collages of watercolor, pencil, and ink add depth, texture, and buoyant spirit to the package.

Raindrops are delightful and danceable musical melodies. (illustrator’s note) (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: Oct. 7, 2017

ISBN: 978-1-250-12770-9

Page Count: 32

Publisher: Godwin Books

Review Posted Online: Aug. 1, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2017

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