Abuelita and Me
-
- $14.99
-
- $14.99
Publisher Description
“Poignantly addresses racism and microaggressions.”-starred review, Booklist
In this touching, empowering picture book debut, a girl and her beloved abuelita lean on each other as they contend with racism while running errands in the city.
Spending time at home with Abuelita means pancakes, puddle-jumping, and nail-painting. But venturing out into the city is not always as fun. On the bus and at the grocery store, people are impatient and suspicious—sometimes they even yell. Sad, angry, and scared, the story’s young narrator decides not to leave home again . . . until a moment of empowerment helps her see the strength she and Abuelita share when they face the world together. Warm, expressive illustrations by Rafael Mayani highlight the tenderness in Abuelita and the narrator’s relationship.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A bus driver's prejudice forces a child to grapple with difficult emotions in this affecting story. Employing first-person narration, a child describes a separation between "inside" as a space where "we can be silly," and "outside" as a locale where "sometimes, people are not nice to Abuelita." On a trip to the store for sopa ingredients, the pair, portrayed with tan skin, first face a white-cued grocer's impatience, and then the cruelty of a pink-skinned bus driver who thinks they are trying to ride for free. After the incident, the child, sad and angry, refuses to go out again, but Abuelita's patient support ("What happened is not our fault. We are not the ones that need to hide") helps them return out of doors. A subtle resolution underlines pride in a personal act in lieu of real equity won, but the incident itself should prompt discussion of systemic racism and its manifold effects. In rust and beige hues, Mayani's dramatic graphics partner readily with the book's lines. Ages 4–7.