Kirkus Reviews QR Code
THE PROUDEST COLOR by Sheila Modir

THE PROUDEST COLOR

by Sheila Modir & Jeff Kashou ; illustrated by Monica Mikai

Pub Date: Sept. 14th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-64170-578-3
Publisher: Familius

When a Black girl experiences racism at school, her parents remind her to stay proud of her brown skin.

The narrator associates colors with her feelings: Her hands are pink when she’s happy, there’s blue in her eyes when she’s sad, red blooms in her cheeks when she is angry. Brown in her heart is her proud color; it’s the color she sees when she looks at herself and what others see when they see her. On her first day of school, she finds she is the only kid with brown skin. She only hesitates for a moment before marching in with her pride intact. But when a White girl tells her she doesn’t like her skin color, the girl loses her pride. At home, she tells her parents and abuela, who are all Black as well, about it. They tell her to remember the important people of various ethnicities who have shared her brown skin: people in her life like her own abuela, as well as famous leaders like Kamala Harris and Frida Kahlo. The girl draws pictures of those changemakers and places herself among them, restoring her pride. The protagonist is an engaging character with an interesting perspective on feelings. While racist incidents are rarely so easily overcome, this book provides a helpful jumping-off point for exploring facts, thoughts, and feelings behind racial identity, awareness, and pride. The attractive illustrations are full of personality in vignettes that flesh out the story’s text. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A useful tool for digging deeper.

(note) (Picture book. 4-9)