


A bright jewel-toned palette and clever details, including a literal reflection of a better future, reveal hope and pride in spite of the taunting. Three other children-Rigoberto, a recent immigrant from Venezuela a presumably Korean girl with her “too strange” lunch of kimchi, meat, and rice and a lonely white boy in what seems to be a suburb-experience more-direct teasing for their outsider status.

López’s incorporation of a ruler for a door, table, and tree into the illustrations creatively extends the metaphor of measuring up to others. Text and illustrations effectively work together to convey her feelings of otherness as she reflects on her own summer spent at home: “What good is this / when others were flying,” she ponders while leaning out her city window forlornly watching birds fly past to seemingly faraway places. This nonlinear story centers on Angelina, with big curly hair and brown skin, as she begins the school year with a class share-out of summer travels. School-age children encounter and overcome feelings of difference from their peers in the latest picture book from Woodson.
