A boy’s drab verbal narrative contrasts with action-packed illustrations of fantastic adventures.
A small boy reading a book casts a horned shadow on his bedroom wall; he startles when his mother enters and asks, in the tradition of parents everywhere, what he did today. The White child narrator’s rote recitation, though lengthy, is empty of particularities: He grabbed his lunch, almost forgot his book bag, and then spent a day in school, played with friends, went home, and ate dinner. Author/illustrator Molinet’s accompanying images tell a far richer story packed with fantasies of jungle exploration, Indiana Jones–style escapes, a glass-domed space school where tentacled aliens teach classes to spacesuit-clad children, and a home life where Viking lord Dad roasts meat on a spit and serves it in front of a roaring castle fire. Best friend Jake, who’s Black, and Emily, who’s White, accompany our protagonist. Many of the fantasies are a tad overworked, with formulaic safari hats and swords-and-sorcery medieval props made interesting via the artwork’s detail and style. Scratchy crosshatched lines, creative composition, and digital painting in muted warm tones evoke indie comics of the early 1990s, and there is plenty of interest and light humor; a pickup game of football, for instance, becomes a battle between Vikings and armored knights over a startled live pig. Constant narration occasionally distracts from the images; readers may wish that parts of the book were textless to give more room to interpretation.
Rich visuals evoke the parts of creative play that are hard for children to describe.