Sullivan’s picture book is an ode to a little girl named Dylan.
In a hospital nursery full of newborns, Dylan smiles and winks at her mother and the doctor; she is special, perfect, and precious from the beginning. As Dylan begins learning to walk, she is fearless. When she falls, she gets right back up again, except for one time when she simply looks around, puts her thumb in her mouth, and takes an impromptu nap right there on the floor. As she gets a little older, Dylan indulges in more comical behavior, raiding the kitchen for cake, taking off her shoes and socks and putting her feet on the table at dinner time, and displaying an excellent sense of humor: “On pizza night Dylan always says to her dad, / ‘There’s a mushroom on your head!’ / And when Dad puts his hand up to see if it’s true, / She laughs ’til her cheeks turn red.” Dylan likes splashing in the mud, singing into her toothbrush/microphone in the bathroom, telling bedtime stories to her stuffed animals, and playing tricks on Mom and Dad. Most of all, Dylan loves to make people laugh. Watson’s whimsical cartoon illustrations spotlight Dylan—the other characters appear as shadows, reacting to her antics. Through the illustrations, readers see Dylan grow from a newborn baby to a little girl, showing the passage of time between stages of her development to give context to the action. Sullivan tells Dylan’s story through rhyming poetry. Each quatrain captures a moment in time tenderly and without artifice: “In summertime Dylan likes washing the car, / And she does it like you’ve never seen. / She can only reach up to the door handles, / So just half of the car gets clean!” The limericklike rhythm maintained throughout the book matches the snapshots of Dylan’s spirit. The narrative honors the truest meaning of delight in the way that each adventure begins with something new and unexpected and ends in a smile—an experience loving parents know well.
A genuine expression of just how loved and special children are.