3 Beautiful Picture Books Celebrating Black Lives

Fish Fry Friday by Winsome Bingham, illustrated by C. G. Esperanza (9781419766930)

In this companion book to Soul Food Sunday, a grandson gets to spend his day off of school with his grandmother fishing. She is known as a lucky charm at the pier and is one of the best fishers out there. Everyone cheers when she arrives and she waves like a queen. After the two catch all sorts of fish, each out declared his grandmother’s favorite, they head back home to clean and filet them. Next comes the batter and finally the real favorite, hushpuppies! 

This picture book is a celebration of how food brings people together and transcends generations. The joy of the two characters spending time together and loving one another is just as filling as the meal they create together. Children will love the time spent on the pier fishing as well as the time in the kitchen. Award-winning illustrator Esperanza captures the colorful characters and their cooking with energy and detail. 

A delicious addition to the soul food celebration. Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Abrams Books for Young Readers.

The History of We by Nikkolas Smith (9780593619681)

This remarkably beautiful picture book tells the history of where human beings started, Africa. It is the story of where language began and where art started on cave walls and faces. It speaks to the creation of music and dance. It tells of survival, of invention, of building and planting. It was where people traveled from using their boats to cross watery divisions and to populate the world. It is our story, of our origins and the many gifts created in Africa.

Smith has crafted such beauty on these pages with his art. The paintings are done in acrylic and offer a gorgeous textural experience to the reader that creates depth and wonder. This book is a clear response to the erasure of Black history and the origins of humans as reflected in the author note. Throughout the book both in text and image, there is joy and pride. There is a richness in both as well, a focus on the achievements, the impacts and the importance of that history.

Beautiful and impactful, this book belongs in all libraries. Appropriate for ages 5-9.

Reviewed from library copy.

When I Hear Spirituals by Cheryl Willis Hudson, illustrated by London Ladd (9780823453801)

In a glorious combination of verse and lines from well-known African-American spirituals, this picture book soars. A young girl expresses what hearing spirituals does to her emotionally and readers are along for the journey. From tears to joy to wanting to dance to acknowledging heroes and movements of the past, this book explores the power of music to connect and convey.

The incorporation of a verse of a corresponding spiritual is particularly effective, allowing the book to be not just read aloud but sung aloud. The illustrations add to the emotional journey, using deep colors, famous African-American figures, and a connection to church.

A great introduction to spirituals as a music form or a celebration for those already familiar. Appropriate for ages 5-9.

Reviewed from library copy.

Millie Fleur Saves the Night by Christy Mandin – Book Review

Millie Fleur Saves the Night by Christy Mandin (9781339023373)

This sequel to Millie Fleur’s Poison Garden is all about loving the dark. In Garden Glen, everyone fought back against the dark with lanterns and lights, hiding in their homes after dark. Millie’s house was the only one left dark since she knew there were special things that only come out in the dark. But even Millie was missing those things due to the brightness of the rest of the town. So, she set out to rediscover the dark and invite it into her garden. Millie plants a moon garden and bakes moon pies, creating just the right space for the creatures of the night to come. When others in Garden Glen smell the moon garden, they come to visit too, but Millie insists that they leave their lanterns behind and be brave. 

Marvelously peculiar and winsome, this picture book shows darkness as a mythical creature that is both strange and marvelously huggable. There is beauty in this garden and space that Millie creates, a lovely stand up to authority and a straight-forward take on light pollution and what is lost. 

Sure to have children wanting to explore their own dark spaces, this picture book is a delicious night-filled read. Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Scholastic.

Daisy Rewilds by Margaret McNamara – Book Review

Daisy Rewilds by Margaret McNamara, illustrated by Kerascoët (9780593125670)

Daisy has always been a conservationist, composting her baby food and sleeping on a bed of leaves as a toddler. Now she is doing a very important experiment by skipping her baths for five weeks. Soon she is growing all sorts of plants on her body. Happily, she has an Auntie Betsy who is a gardener and knows just what to teach Daisy, when to water her, when to flip her upside down. Soon a glorious collection of native plants starts to rewild on Daisy’s body. She lives out on the lawn even in hot August. When September comes, the neighborhood takes notice of Daisy’s amazing plants and wonder how they can do something like it. This is all part of Daisy’s plan.

McNamara writes a story about conservation that is filled with joy and possibility. Rather than having a didactic tone, it shows how one child can make an impact on their neighborhood, even if they don’t do it quite like the rather magical Daisy. The illustrations add to the playful tone and the wonder of the rewilding process happening on a human body.

Plant this one on display or even better use it in a story time to watch it grow. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Random House Studio.

All of Us: A First Conversation about Disability by Dr. Megan Pamela Ruth Madison – Book Review

All of Us: A First Conversation about Disability by Dr. Megan Pamela Ruth Madison and Jessica Ralli, illustrated by Jonathan Eden (9780593891483)

Part of the First Conversations series, this nonfiction picture book tackles speaking to young children about disabilities with a straight-forward approach. The book begins by explaining that everyone looks different from one another and that it is not what we can physically do that makes us matter. The book moves on to respecting how people describe themselves. It talks about access and ableism, defining both clearly and offering deeper explanations about disability justice and its importance. 

It is powerful to find a picture book that offers information that is so informative and impactful. This book goes beyond the superficial nods at disability and truly looks at the damage of ableism and offers resources on what people can do to change access. There is no talking down to children here, just a frank, clear approach to the subject that centers each person with a disability as their own expert and voice. 

Get this one into your library collections. Appropriate for ages 3-7.

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Penguin Workshop.

Good Golden Sun by Brendan Wenzel – Book Review

Good Golden Sun by Brendan Wenzel (9780316512633)

The sun comes up on a dark world. One flower is waiting to absorb the sunlight, opening as the sun rises. A bee visits the flower, carrying the light of the sun from the flower to its hive. A bear eats the glowing honey from the hive and is in turn feasted on by mosquitos that are then eaten by a bird and the cycle of sharing solar energy goes on. Eventually wolves poop on the ground and the plants absorb the energy. A cow eats the grass, a human milks the cow and night falls as a cat enjoys the milk.

Poetic lines invite young readers to explore the way energy moves through a food cycle and how we are all interconnected with one another. The illustrations are particularly compelling with the glow of energy moving across the various creatures and the page.

A beautiful shining read. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.

Don’t Trust Fish by Neil Sharpson – Book Review

Don’t Trust Fish by Neil Sharpson, illustrated by Dan Santat (9780593616673)

At first the book is a basic primer on mammals, reptiles and birds. But when it turns to the subject of fish, it all becomes much more personal! A wide variety of fish are shown, but also called rebels and outlaws! You can’t see what they are up to underwater, plus they break all natural laws. What is happening in their “schools” anyway? So many questions and so much concerning behavior. By the end of this book, you may be questioning your pet fish too.

Completely silly, full of misinformation mixed with facts, this book is a glorious giggle to add to any story time. Appropriate for ages 4-6.

Reviewed from library copy.

George & Lenny Are Always Together by Jon Agee – Book Review

George & Lenny Are Always Together by Jon Agee (9780593857731)

George and Lenny are best friends and spend all of their time together. Then Lenny starts to think about what it might be like to be alone. George thinks it will be lonely and sad, but Lenny starts to think that it might be fun to be alone. Lenny finds a perfect place to be alone, since it only fits one. George offers to come along, but Lenny is sure he can be alone. Lenny does have fun alone. He plays music, reads a book, builds with blocks and much more. But soon he realizes that he misses George. Don’t worry, George too has found a perfect place to be alone, right near by.

Agee is a master of picture books and finding just the right pacing and tone. He uses humor that will have children giggling without laughing at the characters and their feelings and worries. George is a great foil for Lenny as the two navigate allowing some space in their friendship to be on their own, while still managing to be there for one another.

Funny and full of heart. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Penguin Random House.

So Many Years by Anne Wynter – Book Review

So Many Years: A Juneteenth Story by Anne Wynter, illustrated by Jerome Pumphrey (9780063081147)

This joyous and lyrical picture book celebrates the Juneteenth holiday by looking back at the enslavement of the Black-American people and the expression that came afterwards. What would you wear if you’d only been able to wear rags? How would you sing if you had only been able to sing in code? How would you eat if you’d only had scraps? The questions show the devastation and deprivation of those enslaved, the lasting impact of that on the generations that followed. And somehow, out of that came fashion and music and feasts and more. That transformative spirit is what is embraced here in such simple words.

So many Juneteenth books are for older children and cannot be shared aloud easily. This picture book calls to be read aloud to celebrate the holiday, inviting joy in what has been overcome and delighting in the new expression that came out of it. Wynter does an incredible job of taking complex issues and transforming them into something that children can understand and talk more about. She doesn’t oversimplify and lose the darkness either. It’s an incredibly difficult line to walk and she does it with such confidence and skill. The illustrations are done in acrylic on boards and Photoshop, hearkening to the past with black and white pieces that contrast with bright colors in other parts of the page.

A great Juneteenth read that belongs in every library. Appropriate for ages 4-7.

Reviewed from library copy.

Frida Kahlo’s Flower Crown by Nydia Armendia-Sanchez – Book Review

Frida Kahlo’s Flower Crown by Nydia Armendia-Sanchez, illustrated by Loris Lora (9781949480351)

Taking a child-friendly look at the amazing Frida Kahlo’s childhood, this book ties her growing up to the nature and flowers that surrounded her. From the orange tree near her home to recovering from polio by spending time outdoors, Frida was connected to growing things. After a near-fatal accident, art becomes a way for Frida to spend her days in bed, painting to reconnect to the soil beneath her. As an adult, she created a lush native garden and began to wear her signature flower crown.

Told in simple phrases, this picture book biography can be shared successfully as a read aloud. The illustrations by Pura Belpre Honoree Lora burst from the pages with flowers and colors. 

Appropriate for ages 5-9.

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Abrams Books.