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LUNCH EVERY DAY by Kathryn Otoshi

LUNCH EVERY DAY

by Kathryn Otoshi ; illustrated by Kathryn Otoshi

Pub Date: Sept. 7th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-73434-820-0
Publisher: KO Kids Books

A boy befriends his bully and, with the help of his mother, keeps the bully fed daily at school.

Based on a true story, this is dedicated to educator Jim Perez and to “the lady who kept making all those lunches for him, day after day.” In the first spread, readers stand right behind Jimmy, who daily targets the same kid, a boy eating lunch alone. Instead of standing in the line for free and reduced lunches, Jimmy steals the boy’s bagged meals. Jimmy’s first-person narration reveals abuse at home at the hands of his older brothers. When the bullied boy invites his classmates, including Jimmy, to a birthday party, Jimmy learns his target has his own losses. He also has an unexpected encounter with the boy’s mother, who promises she’ll have her son take “a second lunch…for you, every day.” Illustrations with smudgy, relaxed lines—faces are often indistinct and in shadow—and vivid, emotionally charged colors (Jimmy in dark purples and greens and the other boy and his mother in warm oranges and pinks) animate this tale. Jimmy’s inner thoughts occasionally surround his head in hand-lettering (“don’t yell” when the boy’s mother approaches him), and the use of numbers to count the bagged lunches stolen—and, later, given—are effective. The abrupt ending hints at a lifelong friendship between the boys. The races of the protagonists are unclear due to Otoshi's emotive palette, which paints all characters in blues, reds, greens, and so forth, but they have straight hair. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A sensitively told conversation starter for children about abuse, power dynamics, and compassion.

(Picture book. 4-10)