Characters from Sax’s Picture Day (2023) try out something new.
Thirteen-year-old Alexandra Olsen has played rec league baseball for years. Now, as a seventh grader at Brinkley Middle School, she tries out for boys’ baseball. The new coach welcomes her, and Al is skilled enough to make the team, along with Julian Veras, her nonbinary friend from rec league. Meanwhile, classmate Milo Castillo finds the courage to join the art club, something that’s outside his comfort zone, and extroverted Viv Sullivan revives the Brinkley Beak, an old school mascot. When Al is interviewed on local TV for being the first girl ballplayer at Brinkley, it leads to dissent among her teammates; she copes by becoming overly demanding, which causes further friction. Sax does well at depicting a wide range of young people and validating a variety of interests and talents. Al is a fully realized character, and the issue of girls’ equity in sports will be inviting to readers who enjoy graphic novels such as Misty Wilson and David Wilson’s Play Like a Girl (2022) and Matt Tavares’ Hoops (2023). In a subplot, the Brinkley girls’ basketball team’s undefeated season is overlooked in the hubbub over Al’s presence on the boys’ baseball team. The art is very well done, especially the sports scenes shown from multiple points of view. Al is white; there’s racial diversity among the supporting cast.
A story that will encourage readers to spread their wings.
(character sketches, author’s note, resources) (Graphic fiction. 8-12)