Stand aside, dogs. A book is a true best friend.
“This is my book. My favorite book. I carry it with me wherever I go.” A parade of different children grace these pages as we hear the myriad ways that they adore their own particular books. We see children reading with their grown-ups, to their pets, on the subway, and more. They’re moved to dress up as beloved characters or memorize the words. Throughout, Caldecott winner Raschka includes two-page wordless spreads featuring scenes from some of these favorite books. Newbery winner Park’s language has a rhythmic, lyrical quality. Though the words don’t always rhyme, they have a cadence that’s pleasing to the tongue (“This is my book. My favorite book. I wake and I take it. I sleep and I keep it”). Brightly colored watercolor art displays children diverse in terms of skin tone and ability. For all its earnestness, occasionally the art slips in a bit of wry humor for adults (as when a child discovers a “missing” book in a high, out-of-reach place, presumably put there by desperate grown-ups tired of endlessly reading this one aloud). Though it may be preaching to the choir, there’s no denying the power of this paean to books and reading.
With book banning on the rise, how comforting to read about the book as an object so worthy of adoration.
(Picture book. 3-6)