Big Tune
Rise of the Dancehall Prince
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- £8.99
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- £8.99
Publisher Description
An exuberant picture book written by Alliah L. Agostini and illustrated by Shamar Knight-Justice is about a Black boy with big dancing dreams who learns the meaning of courage and community.
It’s the weekend, first in June; speaker’s blasting out big tune!
Cousins, aunties, uncles, friends pack the house, and fun begins.
Shane is shy but loves to dance—and all year long, he’s picked up cans
to earn some money toward his goal: high-tops with a pump-up sole.
But then the speaker blows—it’s done! Will this stop his family’s fun?
Can Shane come through to save the day and bring back Big Tune Saturday?
Set within a vibrant Caribbean American neighborhood and told to a rhythmic beat, Big Tune is a story of Black boy joy that touches on determination, confidence to express who you are, selflessness, and community gratitude.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Portrayals of diasporic Caribbean culture and a child's selflessness distinguish Agostini's 1990s Brooklyn-set story celebrating connection and community. As "cousins, aunties, uncles, friends/ pack the house, and fun begins," young Shane, teased by his brothers for shyness, dreams of being crowned dancehall king like their father—an honor reserved for those with the best moves. Feeling pressure, Shane practices only in secret, saving money earned by collecting cans to buy a new pair of kicks that he's sure will rocket him to the top. But when a speaker breaks and the bashment is canceled, Shane puts his own plans on hold to save "Big Tune Saturday"—an act that's amply rewarded. Agostini's buoyant rhyming verse pulses with details, and Knight-Justice's stylized illustrations layer bold patterns and textures with typewritten text, sheet music, and images of the Jamaican flag, building a joyfully immersive portrait of neighborhood gatherings where "Swaying hips wine fast and slow./ Brown skin shines with black light's glow." An author's note concludes. Ages 3–6.