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LETTERS TO MISTY

HOW TO MOVE THROUGH LIFE WITH CONFIDENCE AND GRACE

Affirming life lessons to encourage athletes, creatives, and everyday dreamers.

A Black principal dancer who broke many barriers offers empowering advice for youth.

In this book that’s organized into five chapters that correspond with ballet positions, Copeland, in collaboration with children’s author Smith, explores attitude, self-discovery, adversity, challenges, and meaningful living. Delivered in the caring tone of a trusted mentor or big sister, this thoughtful work is inspired by Copeland’s conversations with and mail from young people. The contents riff on common concerns about growing up—meeting familial expectations, navigating friendships, setting goals, and dealing with criticism and negativity online and in real life. Gracefully balancing personal experience and time-tested wisdom, Copeland’s insights about body positivity and self-image deftly address complex feelings of being othered. Topics like self-care, shyness, goal setting, and dealing with self-doubt and disappointment are part of the overall upbeat reflections. The forward-looking final chapter includes guided activities to encourage reflection, visualization, and self-directed action. Copeland’s remarkable achievements serve as touch points that are bound to inspire readers. The writing is clear, reassuring, and comforting, the positivity of Copeland’s voice will appeal to a variety of readers, and while there is some repetition, this element effectively allows the work to be sampled as needed rather than read cover to cover. As a trailblazing hero with a distinguished career, Copeland takes a grounded approach that invites readers to become their most authentic selves at every turn.

Affirming life lessons to encourage athletes, creatives, and everyday dreamers. (Nonfiction. 8-12)

Pub Date: May 6, 2025

ISBN: 9781534443037

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Aladdin

Review Posted Online: March 22, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2025

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GUTS

With young readers diagnosed with anxiety in ever increasing numbers, this book offers a necessary mirror to many.

Young Raina is 9 when she throws up for the first time that she remembers, due to a stomach bug. Even a year later, when she is in fifth grade, she fears getting sick.

Raina begins having regular stomachaches that keep her home from school. She worries about sharing food with her friends and eating certain kinds of foods, afraid of getting sick or food poisoning. Raina’s mother enrolls her in therapy. At first Raina isn’t sure about seeing a therapist, but over time she develops healthy coping mechanisms to deal with her stress and anxiety. Her therapist helps her learn to ground herself and relax, and in turn she teaches her classmates for a school project. Amping up the green, wavy lines to evoke Raina’s nausea, Telgemeier brilliantly produces extremely accurate visual representations of stress and anxiety. Thought bubbles surround Raina in some panels, crowding her with anxious “what if”s, while in others her negative self-talk appears to be literally crushing her. Even as she copes with anxiety disorder and what is eventually diagnosed as mild irritable bowel syndrome, she experiences the typical stresses of school life, going from cheer to panic in the blink of an eye. Raina is white, and her classmates are diverse; one best friend is Korean American.

With young readers diagnosed with anxiety in ever increasing numbers, this book offers a necessary mirror to many. (Graphic memoir. 8-12)

Pub Date: Sept. 17, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-545-85251-7

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Graphix/Scholastic

Review Posted Online: May 11, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2019

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THE BOY WHO FAILED SHOW AND TELL

Though a bit loose around the edges, a charmer nevertheless.

Tales of a fourth grade ne’er-do-well.

It seems that young Jordan is stuck in a never-ending string of bad luck. Sure, no one’s perfect (except maybe goody-two-shoes William Feranek), but Jordan can’t seem to keep his attention focused on the task at hand. Try as he may, things always go a bit sideways, much to his educators’ chagrin. But Jordan promises himself that fourth grade will be different. As the year unfolds, it does prove to be different, but in a way Jordan couldn’t possibly have predicted. This humorous memoir perfectly captures the square-peg-in-a-round-hole feeling many kids feel and effectively heightens that feeling with comic situations and a splendid villain. Jordan’s teacher, Mrs. Fisher, makes an excellent foil, and the book’s 1970s setting allows for her cruelty to go beyond anything most contemporary readers could expect. Unfortunately, the story begins to run out of steam once Mrs. Fisher exits. Recollections spiral, losing their focus and leading to a more “then this happened” and less cause-and-effect structure. The anecdotes are all amusing and Jordan is an endearing protagonist, but the book comes dangerously close to wearing out its welcome with sheer repetitiveness. Thankfully, it ends on a high note, one pleasant and hopeful enough that readers will overlook some of the shabbier qualities. Jordan is White and Jewish while there is some diversity among his classmates; Mrs. Fisher is White.

Though a bit loose around the edges, a charmer nevertheless. (Memoir. 8-12)

Pub Date: Feb. 2, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-338-64723-5

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Scholastic

Review Posted Online: Nov. 17, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2020

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