What Riley wore

Elana K. Arnold

Book - 2019

Riley wears whatever clothes feel right each day. On Monday, Riley feels shy and wears a bunny costume to school. On Tuesday, a scary trip to the dentist calls for a super hero cape. For a trip out with Otta and Oma, a ball gown is the perfect outfit.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York, NY : Simon & Schuster 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Elana K. Arnold (Author)
Physical Description
40 pages : illustrations ; cm
ISBN
9781481472609
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Riley's a creative kid who loves to mix up their wardrobe. Each day of the week, Riley decides to wear something unexpected, like a bunny costume on the first day of school, outer space pajamas for a lesson on the planets, or a ballgown to dinner. Riley has a perfectly good reason for choosing each day's outfit (a superhero cape for a nerve-wracking visit to the dentist, for instance, because Riley wanted to be brave ), and through it all, adventurous Riley gets plenty of support from parents, adults, and other children, most of whom are delighted by Riley's choices. One question at the end are you a girl or a boy? is the only mention of gender, and Riley's answer, Today I'm a firefighter. And a dancer. And a monster hunter. And a pilot. And a dinosaur, is good enough for everyone. Arnold playfully addresses identity, and Riley's recurring thoughts about how to make friends should resonate with a wide array of kids. Bold artwork in bright colors and cartoonishly rounded figures gives this amiable picture book even more appeal.--Vivian Alvarez Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Riley has an outfit for each day's experiences. On Monday, the first day of school, the child combats shyness by wearing a bunny costume; for a rainy Friday, it's rubber boots, a tutu, and a police officer jacket. And for a Sunday trip to the park, Riley throws together an outfit that includes purple jeans, the tutu, and a hat with dinosaur spikes. At the playground, a kid asks Riley, "Are you a girl or a boy?" Arnold (Damsel) doesn't employ a gendered pronoun for her protagonist, and bright, rounded illustrations by Davick (It's Not Easy Being Mimi) show Riley in states ranging from pajama clad at school to dressed up in a ball gown for dinner ("Ball gowns are the fanciest"). Riley's answer at the park is equally and confidently nonbinary-"Today I'm a firefighter. And a dancer. And a monster hunter. And a pilot. And a dinosaur"-and everyone is cool with that. ("Want to play?" the child asks.) By connecting Riley's gender nonconforming to the costumed role-playing that most kids engage in, the creators take this timely subject matter into a refreshing realm: normalcy. Ages up to 8. Agent: Rubin Pfeffer, Rubin Pfeffer Content. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review

For Riley, clothes are more than practical-they're expressions of feelings. On Monday, a bunny costume is reassuring for the first day of school ("Riley felt shy"), a superhero cape helps during Tuesday's visit to the dentist ("Riley wanted to be brave"), and a ball gown sets the tone for Wednesday's dinner at a fancy restaurant (because of course). Other people's encouraging reactions to Riley's creative outfits give this style maven confidence and a stronger sense of self. When a crying classmate asks to touch Riley's bunny ears, comforting her helps Riley feel more at ease. The dentist's query about Riley's superpower leads Riley to wonder later if "being a friend" might qualify. Always true to the perspective of Arnold's upbeat, self-possessed (and gender unspecified) young protagonist, Davick's cheery digital illustrations, with their solidly shaped figures, are entirely kid-centric, showing adults only partially-if at all. On Sunday, a kid at the park asks, "Are you a girl or a boy?" Riley, sporting "the world's best tutu, a crazy monster shirt...and a hat with dinosaur spikes," doesn't miss a beat: "Today I'm a firefighter. And a dancer. And a monster hunter. And a pilot. And a dinosaur." The other child's response says it all: "Want to play?" Kitty Flynn November/December 2019 p.62(c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Is Riley a girl or a boy? Riley decides to answer an entirely different question through the creative self-expression of their clothing. Each day of the week, Riley invents a new outfit to wear to school, around the house, and to the park. The tan-skinned, dark-haired protagonist has clothing for every mood and occasion: a bunny suit for first-day-of-school shyness, "a superhero cape to the dentist's because teeth cleaning is scary," and a tutu, perfectly mismatched with a dinosaur hat, for the weekend. Instead of making Riley a target of bullies, the gender-fluid ensembles draw their classmates in. Heartwarmingly, Arnold and Davick depict the spectacularly nongendered protagonist in positive connection with the people around them. Children are at the center of this colorful story: Adults, when they appear, mostly line the periphery of Davick's double-page-spread illustrations while classmates of various skin tones are featured in cheerful detail. In the growing landscape of children's books that explore gender, this offering beautifully normalizes the multifaceted gender expressions people can have, demonstrates the support adults can provide to nonbinary children, and models how easily young ones can relate to one another without having to choose between two gender options. Though Riley's gender identity is never explicitly stated in the narrative, Arnold and Davick's entertaining tale speaks volumes about the creativity of nonbinary kids.Riley's courageous vulnerability is refreshing, fun, and worthy of celebration. (Picture book. 3-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.