A child visits the hospital.
“When I went to the hospital, I cried nine times,” notes the brown-skinned narrator, who also appears in The Airport Book (2016). Her tears begin at the pain in her stomach, which causes her parents—one Black, one White—to rush her to the hospital. Other tearful moments include jostling painfully over a speed bump en route to the emergency room, fretting in a hectic waiting room, and feeling doctors press her stomach. And when she’s diagnosed with appendicitis, which requires surgery, she and her parents cry a little. At night, she cries because of funny smells, beeping machines, and loneliness, though a parent snores nearby. But some things aren’t scary—her hospital gown and bracelet and grippy socks, for instance. The narrator’s matter-of-fact tone and step-by-step descriptions of everything from admission to discharge (a cause for happy tears) are calming, and friendly doctors and nurses offer further encouragement in speech-balloon dialogue. Cartoon illustrations gently depict procedures such as an ultrasound and IV insertion and add occasional humor, as when a passing Sherlock Holmes answers “Elementary” to a page for Dr. Watson. Framing the story by counting the number of times the protagonist cries—and doesn’t cry—is an inspired choice that acknowledges fears but also bolsters readers. A bustling medley of racially diverse background characters invites readers to imagine their stories as well. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
A wonderfully effective, reassuring look at an often scary experience.
(author’s note) (Picture book. 4-8)