As children grow, they learn to use their hands to manipulate and create while their minds grasp ever more complex ideas.
A parent speaks directly to a child, telling them how their small hands fit perfectly in the larger adult hands.“ But soon, your hands will grow. And learn.” The child will be able to do things that are practical, messy, bold, and creative and find splendid new experiences in the wider world. Then the parent can let go. But, for now, those small hands still need the strength and encouragement of a loving parent. Stutzman’s poetic text is a sweet, warm, somewhat abstract testament to parents’ protective love, enhanced by Lilly’s loose, quirky pen, ink, and watercolor illustrations, which provide needed, concrete expressions of the theme. They depict three diverse families, neighbors in three attached row houses. Two Black adults, of different skin tones, head one family with a Black child. A brown-skinned couple parent a child who wears hearing aids; the family is cued as Latine. A light-skinned working parent and older adult (perhaps a grandparent) care for a light-skinned child. A page of framed, labeled photos of the children as adults appears toward the end—the narrator’s hopeful predictions for their futures. Sharp-eyed readers will notice carefully crafted details in the vignettes that depict each family’s unique qualities and what they share—namely, their love and closeness. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Beautifully tender and thoughtful.
(American Sign Language glossary) (Picture book. 4-9)