An immigrant cobbler’s neatly stitched poverty-to-prominence rise.
Young fans of fashion footwear will likely be more dazzled by the arrays of haute couture pumps strewn through the later pages of Desierto’s illustrations than by Tanumihardja’s wooden account of how Jimmy Choo, a shoemaker’s son of Chinese descent from the Malaysian island of Penang, moved to London, leveraged a “strong work ethic” to learn and refine his shoe design and manufacturing skills, and slowly built a distinctive brand. Her description of his career-altering breakthrough meeting with Diana, Princess of Wales, is typically low-key: “He worried what to wear, what to say, and what to do. His mother gave him this advice: Be as presentable as possible.” Thanks, Mom. Again, it’s the illustrations coming to the rescue—portraying Choo enthusiastically posing with racially diverse groups of fellow students, customers, and fashion models on the way to that climactic royal fitting (the first of many to come) and, finally, proudly, with two typically extravagant examples of his wares. An afterword goes over his career (again) in somewhat more specific but still sketchy detail. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
A superficial tribute, memorable chiefly for those remarkable shoes.
(source list) (Picture-book biography. 6-8)