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rrrrj's review
4.0
This might be the first book that I use for storytime, but heavily rework. I love this diverse family picture book - with counting! - but the way it's currently worded would be way confusing for my toddler crew. I'm sure there's a reasoning there! But I might change lines like "One is eight. One box of crayons, one row of ducks, one family," to, "One can be eight. One box with eight crayons, one row of eight ducks. Eight people, one family."
nataliejordans's review
3.0
It was an okay read. I haven't decided if I will read it to my children.
tashrow's review
5.0
A joyous look at how different families can be and how very happy people can be in small and large families. The book is a cheery mix of counting book and family size, moving from one person happily sharing her book with her cat to a very large family of ten with grandparents mixed in. The book celebrates diversity in families as well with people of different ethnic backgrounds and gay parents. This picture book will have every child seeing themselves on the page and able to relate, which is definitely something to be celebrated!
Shannon writes a great little poem that carries this book forward at a brisk and jaunty pace. Each verse looks at a larger family but begins with "One is..." and then the number of people in that family. The verse then goes on to show other objects and items that are that number but still a solid unit, like a bunch of bananas or a flock of birds. The message is one of being loved and included no matter the size of your family or who is part of it.
Gomez's illustrations are lovely. She creates diversity with a sense of ease, rather than it being forced at all. It is a joy to see the final page where all of the families are in the same neighborhood and mingling outside, one big rainbow of people together. Her paper collage illustrations are friendly and filled with small touches that are worth lingering over. It's those touches that make the book feel even more warm and the families all the more loving.
A great pick to celebrate the diversity in every community, this is a great pick to share aloud thanks to the clever rhyme and lovely illustrations. Appropriate for ages 3-5.
Shannon writes a great little poem that carries this book forward at a brisk and jaunty pace. Each verse looks at a larger family but begins with "One is..." and then the number of people in that family. The verse then goes on to show other objects and items that are that number but still a solid unit, like a bunch of bananas or a flock of birds. The message is one of being loved and included no matter the size of your family or who is part of it.
Gomez's illustrations are lovely. She creates diversity with a sense of ease, rather than it being forced at all. It is a joy to see the final page where all of the families are in the same neighborhood and mingling outside, one big rainbow of people together. Her paper collage illustrations are friendly and filled with small touches that are worth lingering over. It's those touches that make the book feel even more warm and the families all the more loving.
A great pick to celebrate the diversity in every community, this is a great pick to share aloud thanks to the clever rhyme and lovely illustrations. Appropriate for ages 3-5.
circleofreadersdruid's review
4.0
This deceptively simple counting book celebrating the diversity of several families was a joy to read. I loved the sheer variety of families included: the stereotypical, nuclear family, yes, but also gay dads with their kids, grandparents as parents, and families with grandparents, aunts, uncles, and kids who all live under one roof. This is one to be read and enjoyed again and again.
rsngphoenix's review
4.0
Might be hormones, but this one made me tear up a little. Loved the artwork!
katebrarian's review
5.0
This book is adorable. It shows families of all sizes, counting up from 1 to 10. The illustrations are beautiful and the sparse words are poetic. Some of the people depicted are ambiguous in race and gender, and the relationships between the people in these families can be interpreted in many ways.