Honoré’s verse highlighting the strength and heart of Black and brown girls comes alive in this picture-book collaboration with Cabrera.
The poem, which was written in 2016 for the author’s own daughters but went viral after Kamala Harris was elected vice president, leads readers in a dance of spoken word and brilliant art. “Brown girl, brown girl / what did you see? // A world that sees my skin / before it sees me,” peals a frank and somber first note that gives way to the chorus of resistance behind it. The artwork follows suit, moving fluidly from a muted image of an isolated, ungrounded figure curled small to a group of girls confidently standing together. The call-and-response style continues, gaining not so much momentum as lift. “Brown girl, Brown girl / what did you do?…what do you feel?…who will you be?” The text soars higher and higher, moving from past to present to future tense. The illustrations intertwine softness and boldness with page after page of brown girls belonging, a visual togetherness that both honors and bridges individual and generational differences. With the gentle crescendo found in familiar reads such as Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? the book invites readers in with its rhythm and luminous full-page spreads, reminding them that call and response is more than just communal storytelling—it is the community.
Warmly, brilliantly welcoming—and not to be missed.
(author's note) (Picture book. 3-8)