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This book is for primary aged students. This is a story about a young boy that notices and new girl, Violet, on the playground one day, and watches her every day as she picks up things and puts them in her grey backpack. Things such as bright red candy wrappers, green soda pop bottle caps, and sticky notes. After so long of watching her, he eventually asked Violet why she keeps all these tings, and she shows him her collection, and it's the most beautiful art he's ever seen.
This is a book about listened to other people's stories, as it can provide a side to them and to the world that you've never seen before. The narrator here was curious enough to ask about the new girl, and his inquisitions were what introduced him to an entirely new side of her. This would be a great classroom read, and may even inspire students to speak to classmates they haven't ever spoken to before.
 
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ehayes22 | Mar 3, 2023 |
Two cousins live in a pair of towns divided by the U.S.–Mexico border in this bilingual ode to cross-border kinship.

A light-skinned, redheaded girl and a brown-skinned, black-haired boy start the day in their respective homes. “This is my house,” she says in a front yard full of green plants and trees and a white house with orange trim. “Esta es mi casa,” he says on a sidewalk in front of colorful houses. Both kids prepare for a trek across a bridge over a river into the other’s town. On each double-page spread, her adventures happen on the verso, while his unfold on the recto, cleverly echoing the same border that separates their towns. Similarly, the girl narrates her visit to her cousin’s Mexican hometown in English, and the boy shares his escapades with his prima on the U.S. side in Spanish. Solis’ amiable English and Spanish texts serve as one-to-one translations of each other (the sole difference being the use of the pronoun ella for the girl and he for the boy), featuring similar content in differing contexts. In both towns, each cousin shows the other a colorful market with “comida deliciosa” and people speaking “idiomas diferentes,” festive holiday celebrations, and family dinners where “food and stories and laughs” flow. Each hometown’s idiosyncrasies mainly arise through the vibrant, cozy artwork, where each pueblo features bustling, distinct neighborhoods. Heading back home at the end of the day, each cousin crosses back through the guarded border walls, wishing for simpler crossings. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

Sweet, good-natured musings on border life. (Picture book. 4-8)

-Kirkus Review
 
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CDJLibrary | 1 altra recensione | Jan 11, 2023 |
A cartoony, expressive pair of eyes challenges the reader to a staring contest. Who will win?

See also: I Will Chomp You by Jory John, The Book With No Pictures by BJ Novak½
 
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JennyArch | Nov 18, 2020 |
Note: I accessed a digital review copy of this book through Edelweiss.
 
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fernandie | 1 altra recensione | Sep 15, 2022 |
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