A Romeo and Juliet story in bird form.
The red-footed boobies live on one rock, while the blue-footed boobies live on another, separated by water. Never the twain shall meet. (A wise old hermit crab who says, “Boobies are silly!” lives on a rock between them.) All is calm until the day a pair of boobies—a young female with red feet and a young male with blue feet—come into contact, realize that they have a lot in common, and fall in love. The pair’s families oppose the match, but the hermit crab performs a marriage ceremony anyway, and soon a chick is born—with purple feet. Both the red- and blue-footed boobies claim ownership, but the parents overrule them all and start a new home with the hermit crab on the in-between rock. Is there anything new here? Not really. The illustrations reinforce gender norms (the female has red feet, the male blue; the female is depicted with long eyelashes), and we’ve seen different versions of this story before. Still, it’s a solid, enjoyable tale about overcoming fear and accepting and celebrating differences, with the likable, goofy boobies making for a fun addition. Weyant’s simple cartoons use plenty of white space. A note includes information on the real birds.
A peppy but predictable lesson in combating prejudice.
(PIcture book. 4-8)