Review by Booklist Review
Drawing inspiration from South Africa, where she's originally from, Paxton offers an imaginative story about a dark-skinned girl who accidentally animates a giraffe she draws on the pavement in chalk. To her surprise, the giraffe is forlorn, grumpy, and pushy, demanding change after change to the girl's drawing. Before long, the girl grows impatient with his demands and erases her creation, but in a fit of regret, she draws her friend again the next day, and this time, he has something to teach her about his reality. Giraffe is eager to show her what the world ""from up here"" looks like, teaching her a valuable lesson about seeing the world from a different perspective. Lötter uses bold colors and thick lines on a dark background in her artwork, which nicely echoes the girl's chalk art, and though the verses in Paxton's lyrical text don't always scan, the bouncy rhythm is a lively counterpoint to the bright illustrations. The helpful message about learning to see things from others' perspectives is useful, too. For larger collections.--Vivian Alvarez Copyright 2020 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
From South Africa comes the story of a cantankerous giraffe and the budding artist who created him.A brown-skinned child, with sizable brown afro puffs and a penchant for yellow, applies yellow and orange chalk to a paved road to draw a giraffe that comes alive. Immediately, the giraffe complains that he's alone and bored with the gray that makes up his created world. In response, the precocious young artist draws him an acacia tree, then bright green lush grass, then stars and a sun. The giraffe volubly finds each improvement wanting, so eventually the exhausted protagonist rubs him, the tree, the stars, and the sun out with a footand then regrets the action. Re-creating the giraffe, the artist is surprised when the giraffe grabs the chalk and draws the child into the picture, which allows the child to see that the giraffe is lonely. Together they draw the giraffe numerous animal friends and congratulate themselves on making "great art," underscoring the value of editing, revision, and precision to the artistic process. For most of the book, black backgrounds highlight the chalky, textured look of the protagonist's artwork, each page warm with citrusy colors and grounded with earthy greens that add exceptional brightness. The striking art helps to compensate for the pedestrian, singsong-y rhyming verse and the tedium inherent in documenting the iterative process of revision. Makes the burdensome process of reworking art surprisingly engaging. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.