Pruett’s regimented, lackluster life is completely transformed when he befriends a vivacious foreigner named Soo.
Pruett, a young monitor head robot, lives on the tiny Planet Monochrome. Like the rest of his fellow automatons, Pruett strives to never stand out, never ask or answer questions, and “never use anything but a black, gray, or white crayon” at school. One day, a new student named Soo arrives, hailing from Planet Prismatic. Soo—a multicolored extraterrestrial who literally glows—is a cheerful maverick who tries to get Pruett to live a little. He resists her attempts at first, but when Soo’s color starts to fade and her glow begins to dim, a remorseful Pruett finds the courage to break out of his society’s mold, igniting a colorful revolution that changes Planet Monochrome forever. The unlikely friendship at the heart of this allegorical picture book is touching. Viau’s writing is engaging; however, the storyline is predictable from beginning to end. Moreover, the story’s depiction of the demise of conformity and its conceptualization of how social change is achieved are frustratingly oversimplistic. Lacera’s digital illustrations are retro-futuristic with nods to video game and comic book aesthetics. Mirroring the story arc, the palette of the artwork gradually shifts from grayscale to brilliantly polychromatic.
Lightweight entertainment.
(Picture book. 4-8)