Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
From its opening "Welcome!" this buoyant picture book promotes a hopeful vision of unity and camaraderie. Salas's easy rhymes partner with Vélez Aguilera's vibrant digital and colored pencil art, urging acceptance--of people with varying personalities (introvert and extrovert), skin tones ("We all wear our skin just like trees wear their bark"), and gender identities as well as people from various locations ("Did you drive along highways? Trek across sand?"). Action-oriented city scenes overall emphasize inclusion--showing people of varying abilities, body types, and religions watching fireworks, playing basketball, flying kites, dancing, drawing, and more--but occasionally veer into stereotype (the sole tall Black figure is portrayed as good at basketball). Nuggets of practical wisdom appear throughout ("Sometimes we'd like to make sadness extinct,/ but teardrops and smiles are joined--they are linked"), supporting the book's open-armed embrace of planetary togetherness and diversity in the human experience. Ages 4--8. (Mar.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
Jauntily rhyming text coupled with colorful, detailed digital illustrations outline the numerous types of people that inhabit the world. Quiet and loud people "both deserve our applause." It doesn't really matter if someone is tall or short because "we're only each as high / as a small grain of sand / next to mountains or sky." Also noted and affirmed are differing personalities, body types, interests, persuasions, and emotions. A nature analogy is creatively used to explore skin color: "We all wear our skin just like trees wear their bark, in infinite shades between light and dark." Some people may be the color of "Oak," "Mahogany," or "Chestnut," and so on. Regarding gender diversity, the text proclaims: "There are boys. There are girls. / And even more choices. / Let's build a world where there is room for all voices." The overarching message that all are equal and belong on this beautiful planet Earth is enhanced by the final observation that when we learn from each other, we grow. Aguilera's vibrant colored pencil and digital media illustrations depict a variety of racially diverse children making music, flying kites, playing together, and more in various parts of their city, the residents of which include women and girls wearing hijabs, a Jewish man sporting a yarmulke, people using wheelchairs, people with disabilities, and a girl with cancer (not discussed in the text but cued in the artwork). An upbeat, empowering celebration of human diversity. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.