On Valentine’s Day, Lucy gets ready to make valentines for the friends she loves.
Her unicorn, Sparkle, joins her, but Lucy tells him not to worry—after all, as she says, “No one expects a valentine from a unicorn.” Even though Sparkle knows Lucy is in charge of valentines, he wants to tell Lucy all the reasons that he loves her. For example, he loves her “curly black hair” (she also has brown skin), her “big laugh,” and the fact that she always makes Sparkle feel loved. Sparkle decides to make Lucy a valentine only to find that there’s a reason that no one expects valentines from unicorns. For one thing, he doesn’t know how to write—or how to use scissors. He laboriously cuts out a heart with his horn and creates a message with hoofmarks, tasks that turn out to be harder than he thought. Eventually, Sparkle creates a valentine that he’s happy with—that is, until he accompanies Lucy to a Valentine’s Day party. When he sees what the other children have made, his card for Lucy seems clumsy and inadequate. Sparkle feels terrible until he realizes that what really matters is how Lucy feels—not only about the valentine Sparkle made, but about Sparkle himself. The book’s text is charming and understatedly witty, and the illustrations are both humorous and sweet. The story’s message of self-acceptance is perfectly suited for young readers whose creative visions don’t yet match their abilities.
A sweet and funny Valentine’s Day read.
(Picture book. 3-7)