An idyllic sojourn in a leafy park alongside the water serves as the setting for a poem about friendship and sharing.
The gentle line-and-color paintings, full of children and adults engaged in many activities, obliquely illuminate the well-meaning but clichéd poetic text. The four-line rhyming stanzas read like so many other works of this type: “Deep in your heart, / the knowing is there. / You know how to love, / and you know how to care.” The pages hold adventures for the children, as viewers follow a small brown-skinned tot in a blue-and-white shirt through the pictures. Judging by the child’s growth from a babe in arms, some years elapse, but neither the child’s outfit nor the seasons change—a disorienting visual choice. Characters of many ages and racial presentations, as well as some with visible disabilities, mark the diversity that is central to the theme of loving kindness as they all play games and frolic. The child in the striped shirt helps a White-presenting kid who slips. Rain starts to fall, but then a rainbow appears and all is well again. A different child with beige skin doesn’t want to share a kite with the brown-skinned protagonist, but the poem explains that “Not everyone feels like it / every day.” A lovely two-page spread ends the book with everyone floating paper boats on the water. (This book was reviewed digitally with 8-by-20-inch double-page spreads viewed at 29.5% of actual size.)
A murky timeline plus a bland text make for an insubstantial read.
(Picture book. 4-6)