In this poignant, wordless picture book, a ferocious storm separates two friends.
A tall mango tree stands in the center of an island teeming with creatures great and small. In a village on the island, two children—one blond-haired and light-skinned, the other dark-haired and brown-skinned—climb and play on the tree, flying colorful kites, feasting on its luscious fruit, and even evading fierce beasts. Rodriguez’s textured, vivid woodblock-printed artwork imbues these serene childhood scenarios with well-worn wistfulness. Landscapes of blue skies and warm sunlight set a suitable backdrop against the sturdy mango tree. Then, dark clouds unexpectedly creep in on a standout double-page spread showing each child asleep on a long tree limb, separated by the book’s gutter. A vicious storm sweeps across the island, blowing the mango tree and the dark-haired child away. Adrift at sea, the lost child avoids oceanic creatures under the moonlight, eventually washing ashore on unfamiliar land. There, a community of black-haired, blue-skinned people welcomes the young newcomer, who resurrects the mango tree on new soil to send a message back home. Inspired by youthful experiences per an author’s note (presented in both English and Spanish), Cuban American Rodriguez’s latest is a touching tribute to the uplifting joys of friendship and the thrilling unknowns of adventures, told with acute detail from a child’s perspective.
Simply spellbinding.
(Picture book. 4-8)