Dip a toe into ancient history.
Salting her poptastic narrative with slang expressions for extra flava (“People were psyched to talk on cordless phones and leave a message on an answering machine”), Michaels harks back to the fads, fashions, “rad” toys, “gnarly” entertainments, and unwieldy tech that kick-started the millennial generation. The bare lists of names here aren’t going to give today’s readers much sense of what popular toys or Saturday morning cartoons looked like or why they appealed to those born in the ’80s…but even younger children will have no trouble marveling at, say, TVs with no remotes (“you had to manually change the channel!”) or, for that matter, seeing the effect on their elders of resurrecting nearly forgotten terms like mullet and boom box. On the whole, however, it’s fairly shallow, though a closing suggestion to ask grown-ups for memories or even mementos of the decade may well spark a bit of cozy intergenerational give-and-take. While the children portrayed in the cartoon images are diverse, the stock photos mostly depict White-presenting kids.
A superficial jaunt through the age of the Rubik’s Cube, Cabbage Patch Kids, and the Walkman.
(Informational early reader. 6-8)