PreS-Gr 3–A young Black girl learns what gets her mama through the everyday: step. When Mama is racially profiled in her own neighborhood? STOMP CLAP. When a white woman asks to touch her hair in a grocery store? FLIP FLAP, GO HARD. When our young narrator is told she “play(s) too rough?” SNAP BACK. She learns from her mother’s sorority sister, her aunt, and a community leader that step is about sisterhood and tradition; passed down through generations born into slavery and then flourishing in Black Greek organizations. She is encouraged by her mother and aunt to join her own step team, and this is where the story ends—in a dance studio, steppin’ with her new sisters. Colorful illustrations literally show the soul and energy that each of these women and girls put into their steps. It radiates off them like bright sunlight, jumping off the page. In the text, readers will feel the beat in their heart with the sounds of step appearing in larger type, so they can’t be missed. This mother-daughter duo of creators includes back matter for those interested in what step is, a short time line, and resources for learning more.
VERDICT A wonderfully rhythmic picture book on an aspect of Black culture that is not often highlighted in the picture book format.
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