Siblings Marisol and Pepito spot the essential workers in their neighborhood during the Covid-19 lockdown.
Thanks to the “bad virus” that closed the stores and restaurants, Mami can no longer cook at Rosita’s Café. Other people, however, do have to work. “Los muy necesarios,” says Mami, the essential workers who make sure there’s power, water, and food. On their way with Mami to deliver food and medicine to older family members, Marisol and Pepito play a game of I Spy (Veo, Veo) to identify all the essential workers in their neighborhood. “Veo, veo,” starts Marisol, “a trash collector! He has work!” Pepito sees Nurse Marco returning home from caring for sick people, and Marisol catches Vanessa and Victor hopping in the van that takes them to the chicken plant. All masked, the bus driver, firefighters, and landscaper are hard at work, too. Back at home, Marisol (“Now I see what I had not before”) makes a sign celebrating the essential workers. Delacre ingeniously sets up the game of Veo, Veo as a conversation between the siblings and Mami that alternates between English and Spanish, leveraging that back and forth to acknowledge the importance of each worker during the unprecedented pandemic lockdown. An author’s note further discloses that these essential workers “were disproportionately Black and Brown.” Fittingly, the collage artwork features a community full of Black and brown folks in a neighborhood rendered in effervescent colors and curved landscapes; the protagonists are brown-skinned and Latine. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Essentially kindhearted.
(Picture book. 4-8)