This book is a celebration of who and what a baby could someday become, as well as a reminder of how perfect they already are. This is an important message for all of us, no matter our ages.
I might purchase this for someone I know who is expecting a baby.
Shar Tuiasoa's art work is gorgeous! I wanted to dig out my scraps and embroidery floss to try and recreate it in fabric!
Piper loves to sing. She sings everywhere and all the time. She especially enjoys singing in her school choir, but when she is asked to sing a solo, she ends up getting anxious and feeling butterflies in her tummy.
At home she talks to Nai Nai, her grandmother, about her feelings. Nai Nai helps her change the way she thinks about those butterflies and instead of fearing them, learns to see them as a reminder that something exciting is about to happen.
I love a lot about this book. First, I adore Qin Leng's illustrations. I love Piper's relationship with her grandmother. I love that they are both musically creative and that it's who Piper goes to for help. I love that while Nai Nai tells Piper about her butterflies, we also get a glimpse into her background story. The music teacher, Mr Harris, is pretty cool too when he tells Piper she can sing with the rest of the class instead of soloing if that's what she wants.
I wish this book had been around when I was still teaching. It's a great resource for students like Piper who get anxious when they have to do anything in front of a crowd.
Momo lives in Town 99. Her favourite restaurant is Noodle and Bau. Bau is also her best friend. When the building is sold and they are evicted, they struggle to make ends meet by selling their food from a cart parked across from their former restaurant. It now houses a high end cafe run by Ms. Jujube. None of the residents of Town 99 could afford to eat there.
Momo is determined to help Noodle and Bau get their restaurant back. Meanwhile, the community is changing. Rent is increasing, people are moving out, and new shiny shops are moving in. Even Momo's parents are having trouble dealing with the high cost of housing.
At one point in the story, it looks like Noodle and Bau will succeed at getting their place back, but it turns out that Ms. Jujube has plans that will destroy their community even more.
Momo is determined to do everything to save their neighbourhood and stop the gentrification. She starts out working on her own, but it isn't until the whole community gets involved, that they can be successful. The importance of collective effort is a message we need now more than ever.
Town 99 is populated by a collection of human and anthropomorphized animals. I thought they might represent the diversity of the population, but am not sure since Momo, who is shown as human, has two animal parents. Perhaps the animal people represent first generation immigrants and the more human looking ones are those who were born there. Even the text, written in both English and Cantonese characters, highlights the complexity of the residents. I was fascinated by the character of Ms. Jujube. On the one hand, she seems to be evil incarnate, but on the other, she is very supportive of Bau, and even pays for him to go to cooking school.