A Girl Like Me

Awards:   Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC) Choices Great Reads from Great Places Horn Book Best Books of the Year Rise: A Feminist Book Project List
Author:   Angela Johnson ,  Nina Crews
Publisher:   Lerner Publishing Group
ISBN:  

9781541557772


Pages:   32
Publication Date:   04 February 2020
Recommended Age:   From 8 to 9 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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A Girl Like Me


Awards

  • Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC) Choices
  • Great Reads from Great Places
  • Horn Book Best Books of the Year
  • Rise: A Feminist Book Project List

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Angela Johnson ,  Nina Crews
Publisher:   Lerner Publishing Group
Imprint:   Lerner Publishing Group
Dimensions:   Width: 24.10cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 28.60cm
Weight:   0.485kg
ISBN:  

9781541557772


ISBN 10:   1541557778
Pages:   32
Publication Date:   04 February 2020
Recommended Age:   From 8 to 9 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Poet Johnson (Heaven) bridges fanciful aspirations and attainable goals in this inclusive portrait of girlhood. 'I always dream' opens the airy, free-verse narrative. In collages superimposing crisp photos against swirling abstract backdrops, Crews (Seeing into Tomorrow) portrays a girl flying through the air in a red cape, another walking atop skyscrapers, and a third swimming in the ocean, becoming 'part of the waves, ' while onshore onlookers holler, 'A girl like you needs to/ stay out of the water/ and be dry, / like everyone else.' The collaborators bring the tone down to earth as the kids react to unseen naysayers who discourage their dreams. In affirmations of their spirit of curiosity and adventure, the girls don vibrant clothing and funky hats as they skip down city streets and frolic by the ocean, always 'thinking/ way up/ high/ and making/ everything/ better than/ the dream.' The book concludes with a roundup of the subjects and personal statements about their personalities, favorite things, and ambitions, inviting readers' own self-reflections. A blithe celebration of individuality, guts, and sisterhood. --Publishers Weekly --Journal A book to inspire the next diverse generation of girls to keep working toward breaking glass ceilings no matter how often the world tells them, 'A girl like you needs to stop.' Johnson and Crews are seasoned talents whose collaboration here shines. Johnson's spare words of encouragement are in harmony with Crews' large double-page spreads blending photos of black and brown girls into a collaged dream world. Each of three girls is a star in her own dream only to hear people shouting in the background that what she wants simply isn't possible. The illustrations show the three meeting on an urban playground and then encouraging other neighborhood girls of many races to join them in standing up to the doubters. There is much that Johnson doesn't say that Crews uses pictures to illustrate. Adult readers may need to help children understand what is taking place in the story, at the heart of which is the power of play. Each girl is seen using her imagination to make her reality 'better than the dream.' Illustrating this, a dozen girls in ebullient dress-up pose on the beach, all unapologetically themselves. A final spread allows each depicted girl to tell readers a little bit about herself--a sweet touch that drives home this reminder that girls should be supported in exploring their limitless imaginations, regardless of the naysayers. A great way to spark real-world conversations with other girls 'like me.' --Kirkus Reviews --Journal Black girls lead the way in this story about defining oneself and making the world a better place. Three girls take turns sharing their dreams about flying high, standing tall, and being free. Each girl's dream is scuttled by people telling her that 'a girl like you' should not be doing the amazing things she does in her dreams, that 'a girl like you' should be like everyone else. 'Once I dreamed I swam/the ocean/and saw everything deep, /cool/ and was part of the waves. I swam on by the people/onshore hollering, A girl like you needs to/stay out of the water/and be dry, /like everyone else. ' The three boldly take charge of their dreams. They gather the capes, hats, and scarves that represent them and expand their visions to include other girls as they proudly take up space in the world, sure of their value and confident in their power to create real-world change. Crews's signature photo-collage style is the perfect artistic choice for this book, using photos of real girls and beautiful cityscapes in combination with recurring shapes, textures, and symbols that tie the dreamy spreads in with the real-world ones. VERDICT An excellent addition for all collections. --School Library Journal --Journal


A book to inspire the next diverse generation of girls to keep working toward breaking glass ceilings no matter how often the world tells them, 'A girl like you needs to stop.' Johnson and Crews are seasoned talents whose collaboration here shines. Johnson's spare words of encouragement are in harmony with Crews' large double-page spreads blending photos of black and brown girls into a collaged dream world. Each of three girls is a star in her own dream only to hear people shouting in the background that what she wants simply isn't possible. The illustrations show the three meeting on an urban playground and then encouraging other neighborhood girls of many races to join them in standing up to the doubters. There is much that Johnson doesn't say that Crews uses pictures to illustrate. Adult readers may need to help children understand what is taking place in the story, at the heart of which is the power of play. Each girl is seen using her imagination to make her reality 'better than the dream.' Illustrating this, a dozen girls in ebullient dress-up pose on the beach, all unapologetically themselves. A final spread allows each depicted girl to tell readers a little bit about herself--a sweet touch that drives home this reminder that girls should be supported in exploring their limitless imaginations, regardless of the naysayers. A great way to spark real-world conversations with other girls 'like me.' --Kirkus Reviews --Journal Poet Johnson (Heaven) bridges fanciful aspirations and attainable goals in this inclusive portrait of girlhood. 'I always dream' opens the airy, free-verse narrative. In collages superimposing crisp photos against swirling abstract backdrops, Crews (Seeing into Tomorrow) portrays a girl flying through the air in a red cape, another walking atop skyscrapers, and a third swimming in the ocean, becoming 'part of the waves, ' while onshore onlookers holler, 'A girl like you needs to/ stay out of the water/ and be dry, / like everyone else.' The collaborators bring the tone down to earth as the kids react to unseen naysayers who discourage their dreams. In affirmations of their spirit of curiosity and adventure, the girls don vibrant clothing and funky hats as they skip down city streets and frolic by the ocean, always 'thinking/ way up/ high/ and making/ everything/ better than/ the dream.' The book concludes with a roundup of the subjects and personal statements about their personalities, favorite things, and ambitions, inviting readers' own self-reflections. A blithe celebration of individuality, guts, and sisterhood. --Publishers Weekly --Journal


Poet Johnson (Heaven) bridges fanciful aspirations and attainable goals in this inclusive portrait of girlhood. 'I always dream' opens the airy, free-verse narrative. In collages superimposing crisp photos against swirling abstract backdrops, Crews (Seeing into Tomorrow) portrays a girl flying through the air in a red cape, another walking atop skyscrapers, and a third swimming in the ocean, becoming 'part of the waves, ' while onshore onlookers holler, 'A girl like you needs to/ stay out of the water/ and be dry, / like everyone else.' The collaborators bring the tone down to earth as the kids react to unseen naysayers who discourage their dreams. In affirmations of their spirit of curiosity and adventure, the girls don vibrant clothing and funky hats as they skip down city streets and frolic by the ocean, always 'thinking/ way up/ high/ and making/ everything/ better than/ the dream.' The book concludes with a roundup of the subjects and personal statements about their personalities, favorite things, and ambitions, inviting readers' own self-reflections. A blithe celebration of individuality, guts, and sisterhood. --Publishers Weekly --Journal


""[A] rallying cry for girls to reject limitations others might place on them and their dreams.""—starred, The Horn Book Magazine ""An excellent addition for all collections.""—School Library Journal ""A book to inspire the next diverse generation of girls to keep working toward breaking glass ceilings . . .""—Kirkus Reviews ""[A] celebration of individuality, guts, and sisterhood.""—Publishers Weekly


Author Information

Angela Johnson is an award-winning poet and children's author with more than forty books to her credit. She began her writing career in 1989 with the publication of a picture book called Tell Me a Story, Mama, which won the Ezra Jack Keats New Writer Award. She has won three Coretta Scott King Awards, the Michael L. Printz Award, and the Margaret A. Edwards Award for significant and lasting contribution to young adult literature. In recognition of her outstanding talent, Angela was named a 2003 MacArthur Fellow. She lives in Kent, Ohio. Author and illustrator, Nina Crews uses collage to create distinctive picture books. Her first book, One Hot Summer Day, was published in 1995 and is still in print today. Her titles include A Girl Like Me, Seeing Into Tomorrow: Haiku by Richard Wright, The Neighborhood Mother Goose, and Below. Her work has been selected by ALA's Notable committee, the Junior Library Guild, NCTE, New York Public Library, Chicago Public Library, Bank Street College of Education, and others. She is the daughter of children's book authors and illustrators Donald Crews and Ann Jonas. Nina lives in Brooklyn, New York with her husband and son.

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