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STAR GIRL

Warm and sweet.

Can a little girl keep her favorite star?

Every night, Gracie can see her star shining brightly from her window. But in the morning, it’s always gone. She misses it, so one night she creeps into the nearby forest and climbs to the very top of the tallest tree. By stretching out her hand, she can just reach her star. She takes it home, but it loses its luster there. Gracie puts on her most shimmering outfit and dances all around, but this doesn’t bring the glimmer back. That night, she takes it outside, but when the sky lights up, her star remains dim. She puts it in the company of fireflies and sets it among sea stars, “[b]ut it just lay there sadly.” Finally, with all her strength, Gracie throws the star as far into the sky as she can. That night, her star is back, shining in the sky. Just as her star belongs there, she belongs at home, watching it. Littlewood’s tale nicely captures childhood imagination, and her watercolors lend it an extra layer of dreaminess. Blonde, pigtailed Gracie is an appealing blend of wonder and determination, and the landscapes she inhabits are lovely.

Warm and sweet. (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: Aug. 15, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-84780-146-3

Page Count: 28

Publisher: Frances Lincoln

Review Posted Online: June 24, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2014

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EVEN SUPERHEROES HAVE BAD DAYS

An action-packed romp.

Superheroes deal with their emotions.

What happens when the empowered have a terrible day? Becker posits that while they could go on destructive sprees and wreak havoc, the caped crusaders and men and women of steel harness their energies and direct it in constructive ways. Little readers filled with energy and emotion may learn to draw similar conclusions, but the author doesn’t hammer home the message. The author has much more fun staging scenes of chaos and action, and Kaban clearly has a ball illustrating them. Superheroes could use laser vision to burn down forests and weather powers to freeze beachgoers. They could ignore crime sprees and toss vehicles across state lines. These hypothetical violent spectacles are softened by the cartoonish stylizations and juxtaposed with pages filled with heroic, “true” efforts such as rounding up criminals and providing fun at an amusement park. The illustrations are energetic and feature multicultural heroes. The vigorous illustrations make this a read for older children, as the busyness could overwhelm very little ones. While the book’s formula recalls How Do Dinosaurs Say Goodnight? and its many sequels, the relative scarcity of superhero picture books means there’s a place on the shelf for it.

An action-packed romp. (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2016

ISBN: 978-1-4549-1394-8

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Sterling

Review Posted Online: June 21, 2016

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2016

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I WILL BE FIERCE

Birdsong began her career as a teacher, and the book will find repeated use in the classroom.

A multicultural girl-power manifesto featuring a feisty young girl who faces her day as a knight on an epic quest.

The unnamed narrator puts on her “armor” (a rainbow sweater) and fills her “treasure chest” (a backpack). Venturing forth to “explore new worlds,” she drives back “dragons” (neighborhood dogs on their walk), boards the “many-headed serpent” (her school bus, with schoolmates’ heads protruding from every window), and visits “the Mountain of Knowledge” (the school library) to “solve the mysteries of the unknown.” After standing up for her beliefs—by joining a classmate sitting alone in the cafeteria—the young girl returns home to rest in the lap of an older female relative, possibly a grandparent/primary caregiver, to prepare for the next day, when she can be “fierce again.” Birdsong’s repeated refrain—“I will be fierce!”—underlines the unambiguous message of this sassy picture book, and Chanani’s bold and energetic illustrations reinforce the text’s punchy, feminist-y declarations. They depict a joyously multiracial environment, consciously tackling stereotypes with an elderly, white, female bus driver and a groovy, Asian-presenting librarian with a green streak in her hair. The fierce protagonist herself has brown skin and fluffy, dark brown hair, and her caregiver also has brown skin.

Birdsong began her career as a teacher, and the book will find repeated use in the classroom. (Picture book. 4-7)

Pub Date: April 23, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-250-29508-8

Page Count: 40

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press

Review Posted Online: March 2, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2019

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