![]() ![]() Let’s hope more people, starting with this picture book’s audience, embrace it.Ī home-renovation project is interrupted by a family of wrens, allowing a young girl an up-close glimpse of nature. Penfold and Kaufman have outdone themselves in delivering a vital message in today’s political climate. ![]() ![]() Kaufman’s acrylic, ink, crayon, collage, and Photoshop illustrations bring the many personalities in this school community to life. What is most wonderful, though, is the way they interact with one another without regard to their many differences. A rainbow of hair colors and skin tones is in evidence, and children with disabilities are also included: a blind boy, a girl in a wheelchair, and several kids with glasses. Several kids point to their home countries on a world map, and some wear markers of their cultural or religious groups: There’s a girl in hijab, a boy wearing a Sikh patka, and a boy in a kippah. All are welcome here.” Indeed, this school is diversity exemplified. In between, the rhyming verses focus on aspects of a typical school day, always ending with the titular phrase: “Time for lunch-what a spread! / A dozen different kinds of bread. A lively city school celebrates its diversity.įront endpapers show adult caregivers walking their charges to school, the families a delightful mix that includes interracial, same-sex, and heterosexual couples as well as single caregivers the rear endpapers assemble them again at the conclusion of a successful schoolwide evening potluck. ![]()
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