Happy Sunday, kidlit friends! I have welcomed in the new year with yet another respiratory virus, sigh. Here’s hoping for a healthier year! Today, I’m reviewing books about elections and two fabulous new releases.
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Bookish Goods
Bookstore Hoodie Sweatshirt by SciencePlusCoffee
This hoodie looks so comfy and cozy, perfect for the winter months. $52
New Releases
Like So by Ruth Forman, illustrated by Raissa Figueroa (PB)
This is the sweetest picture book about the love between a grandchild and a grandmother. Its simple and heartwarming prose describes acts of love: “I hug you like so / you hug me like so / we got love.” The vibrant illustrations depict sweeping scenes from both nature and at home, connecting this love as being a part of nature. Ruth Forman previously published several board books celebrating Black joy (like Glow and Curls), but this is her debut picture book.
The Selkie’s Daughter by Linda Crotta Brennan (MG)
I am always here for selkie folklore retellings. This is a lovely historical fantasy set in Nova Scotia. Brigit is the daughter of a selkie and a fisherman, though she lives with the humans and tries to deny her selkie heritage by cutting the webbing from her hands and feet. When villagers begin killing seal pups, the selkie king is angered, and Brigit must come to accept and love her heritage if she wants to save her father, the village, and the seals.
For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.
Riot Recommendations
I’m sure I’m not the only one feeling some anxiety about elections happening this year. Kids will have questions and want to learn more, and these four children’s books about voting and elections are great ways to start answering some of those questions.
Ida B. Wells Marches for the Vote by Dinah Johnson, illustrated by Jerry Jordan (PB)
This picture book biography of famous Black activist Ida B. Wells opens with her birth in Mississippi. It follows Ida’s life as she becomes a teacher as a teenager to care for her younger siblings after the death of their parents, starts her own newspaper and writes against lynching, and becomes a suffragist for women’s right to vote. The sweeping biography then pauses at the Women’s March of 1913. At this famous march, racist white women suffragists, like Alice Paul, told Ida and other Black suffragists that they could not march in the parade. Ida ignored them. Connecting all these stories is the theme of Ida’s bravery and courage in always choosing to do the right thing. The painted illustrations are gorgeous.
The Walk by Winsome Bingham, illustrated by E. B. Lewis (PB)
This was one of my favorite picture books of 2023. It follows a child as she and her grandmother walk to a polling location. As they walk, they gather neighbors, and as a community, they take their most important walk of the year — to the polls. I love the inclusion of disabled and elderly community members, whose right to vote is often made much more difficult by lack of accessibility. I also adore the themes of community care and activism. When my daughter accompanied me on a walk to vote last year, I actually brought this book with me, and we read it together after I voted.
Sofia Valdez and the Vanishing Vote by Andrea Beaty, illustrated by David Roberts (TR)
This chapter book is part of The Questioneers series, though each book can be read as a standalone. The famous questioning class is having a class election on what their class pet should be, and Sofia Valdez is chosen as election commissioner to make sure the election goes off without any hitches. When the votes are counted, one vote is missing, and it’s up to Sofia to figure out why and how. I adore this series. Also, check out the picture book Sofia Valdez, Future Prez.
Act by Kayla Miller (MG)
This middle grade graphic novel is the third book in the Click series, though each book can be read as a standalone. Olive and her friends have started 6th grade. When she learns of unfair policies that prevent her friend from going on a school field trip, she decides to take action and run for the student council. She wants to change the rules to make things more fair, but she’s running against two of her other friends. This is an empowering read about how kids can make a difference at their schools.
Today is the last day of my daughter’s winter break. We’ve stayed home almost the entire time as I recover from the latest virus. She has been entertaining herself by taking her stuffed animals outside and having them go on adventures in the backyard, like climbing this tree. Meanwhile, I am sitting on the porch with a box of tissues and guzzling tea.
If you’d like to read more of my kidlit reviews, I’m on Instagram @BabyLibrarians, Twitter @AReaderlyMom, Bluesky @AReaderlyMom.bsky.social, and blog irregularly at Baby Librarians. You can also read my Book Riot posts. If you’d like to drop me a line, my email is kingsbury.margaret@gmail.com.
All the best,
Margaret Kingsbury