Description
Siblings Luna and Zion are feeling a bit overwhelmed. Big words keep rushing at them: Homelessness. Pandemic. Inequality. Recession. Unemployment.
They don't understand the words, but grown-ups do, and the siblings can see how upset the words make them. Wanting to understand the words themselves, Luna and Zion spell them out with building blocks, but the words' weight sends the blocks tumbling. So they recruit other kids to help them. Many hands make light work, and as the words are constructed from any materials the children can find, the words themselves grow lighter, and change: Equality. Kindness. Compassion. Liberty. Democracy. Freedom. Hope.
The words are still big, but not as heavy-ones everyone can carry, if we carry them together.
About the Author
Erica Simone Turnipseed is a teacher, social justice activist, novelist, and essayist, as well as the author of Bigger Than Me. Originally from Brooklyn, she holds BA and MA degrees in anthropology from Yale and Columbia, respectively, and now lives in Washington, DC.
Kara Bodegon is a cartoonish-illustrator, author, and music journalist who has a thing for sharks. She lives in Manila, Philippines.
Book Information
ISBN 9781665900324
Author Erica Simone Turnipseed
Format Hardback
Page Count 40
Imprint Atheneum
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Weight(grams) 460g
Dimensions(mm) 279mm * 216mm * 13mm