A young boy is surprised to learn others are also named Max.
“The one and only Max,” an affectionate moniker given to him by his parents, is reinforced by iterations of his name emblazoned all over his room. During a visit to the park, Max is shocked to discover two other children answering to Max: a Black girl on roller skates and a White child on a scooter. Putting his confusion and discomfort aside, Max volunteers to help roller-skating Max find her pink pine cone. All three Maxes jubilantly scour the park searching for the missing item. Working together has warmed the formerly one-and-only Max to the existence of more Maxes. Later he corrects his parents, explaining he’s one of many Maxes, and despite the shared name, each Max is different in their own way. Since more text is devoted to the pine-cone search than to showing what makes each Max distinct, readers must rely on their depictions to understand what he means, with most differences being physical attributes. The cheerful, cartoony illustrations and vivid color palette are pleasing but can’t overcome the rushed ending and the promotion of body type and skin and hair color as the primary ways individuals can be distinct. Main character Max is biracial, with medium-brown skin and curly, dark-brown hair; his mom presents Asian, and his dad presents Black. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
Mistakenly places emphasis on appearances over millions of other ways people can be unique.
(Picture book. 4-8)