A new superhero family story from Graham.
Fans of Graham’s earlier title Max (2000), about a young superhero and his parents, will be delighted to meet the newest addition to their family, a redheaded girl named Maxine. Max is happy to “meet” his little sister via a sonogram image, which shows her already wearing her mask in utero in the cartoon-style watercolor-and-ink illustrations. This funny foray into fantasy risks undermining the internal logic of the story, however, when Maxine grows up and eschews the superhero garb her family gifts her. Shedding her cape and choosing jeans instead of tights and boots seems liberating in the context of the story as Maxine resists her family’s admonitions that “superheroes do NOT wear jeans”; removing the mask that ostensibly grew as part of her body during gestation feels somehow different. Ideally, readers will see this act as one of self-affirmation that never undermines Maxine’s status as a superhero child (she can still fly without her cape), but the storytelling seems a bit underdeveloped in its exploration of how Maxine asserts her distinct identity. Graham’s customary humor is amply present in illustrative details such as the masked family dog, the lightning-bolt–shaped house, and a family of fairies glimpsed beneath the curtain of a dressing room as Maxine tries on jeans. All main characters present as White.
This story has its big heart in the right place, but it’s missing a beat.
(Picture book. 4-7)