A series of moments, mundane and meaningful, capture the wonder of a life well lived.
Each spread in the book offers a set of opposites. A baby is “a small person in a big chair” awaiting “squishy oatmeal in a hard bowl.” Three pages later, that baby is a child who greets their returning parents, feeling “a cold jacket on a warm face.” Soon the little one becomes a student, a parent, and, finally, a grandparent. Salmieri’s colored-pencil drawings reveal the constants that follow the protagonist as they age; plants, bluebirds, and a black dog all reappear throughout. Deeper connections are implied, too. A microscope gifted in childhood foreshadows a career in science, and the protagonist’s future partner can be spotted in the background of the lab in which they work. This play between text and illustration will engage young readers, while the journey through familiar beats of life is sure to tug at caretakers’ heartstrings. The protagonist has the same black hair and tan skin as one of their parents; their other parent has brown hair and skin a shade lighter. The protagonist’s partner is lighter-skinned, and their grandchild is brown-skinned. Background characters are racially diverse but differ little in body type. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
This meditation on the patterns of life shines with reminders of what we carry with us as we grow.
(Picture book. 3-7)