PreS-Gr 1—Imagine a house with many rooms, whose walls each have a different color or wallpaper, accenting a family portrait hanging there. On a rustic wooden wall hangs the first portrait—a large family of ducks posing beside a still pond. The next spread shows three pandas in pink vests, much like the pink oriental wallpaper behind them. Each portrait features a gently rhyming line: "Some children live with their grandparents…/and some live with an aunt./Some children have many pets…/and some just have a plant." All of these appealing images demonstrate different ways of being a family. "Some children live with their father./ Some children have two mothers./Some children are adopted./Some have stepsisters and—brothers." The cartoon-style critters contrast pleasantly with more realistic elements—a bamboo plant, a slender ceramic dog, a fat ceramic cat. Families of hippos, tigers, lions, ostriches, and whales join the other family groups in the final spread. The loud-and-clear message is that "if you love each other, then you are a family." And imagine the many children who will be reassured because they have found a portrait of a family they will recognize as their own. A solid choice for most libraries.—
Mary Jean Smith, formerly at Southside Elementary School, Lebanon, TN
"Some children live with their grandparents / and some live with an
aunt. / Some children have many pets... / ...and some just have a
plant!" Todd Parr's The Family Book mined the same
all-family-configurations-deserve-respect territory, but the Langs
go with rhymes and an all-animal cast. The art is multifaceted,
featuring framed family photos with both illustrated and
photographic elements.
Be the first reader to comment.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!