Skip to main content
Displaying 1 of 1
American desi
2022
Availability
Large Cover Image
Trade Reviews
Publishers Weekly Review
In rhyming text, Rajan Gopal's picture book debut smartly explores the duality of one child's bicultural American and Indian identity. Energetic mixed-media collage art by Kelkar (Bindu's Bindis) makes good use of each spread's layout, showing the child narrator comfortably straddling two worlds--one visualized on either side of the book's gutter. On the verso, the child, portrayed with spectacles and long black hair, is shown barefoot in a temple ("Flowers, incense fill the air") and, on the recto, sneaker-clad on swings ("Wearing shoes without a care"). Other spreads compare and contrast watching cricket and American football, and executing both "Bollywood moves" and "hip-hop grooves," among other experiences. Though each double image ends with a probing either/or question--"Which is the color of me?"--the initially disparate-seeming experiences build to a moment of cohesion as the child pulls the threads of varying garments into their hands: "Gathering, holding in my hands/ The different colors of me." Following this moment, fabrics, foods, and languages ("Hindi, Tamil twirl and swirl/ English drawls and twangs and flares") appear together on the page, twining layers of identity as the protagonist declares themself: "Blending, merging, taking wing/ The glorious colors of me." Ages 4--8. (June)
School Library Journal Review
K-Gr 4--"Which is the color of me?" is the question at the center of this picture book in which a young girl explores her dual identity of Indian and American. Told lyrically, with bold adjectives that portray a universe of dancing, feeling, words, spices, food, bindis, bangles, fabrics, moods, and more, Gopal examines how young children make sense of their world when it crosses cultures through multiple sensory experiences. This book can evoke conversations of religion, race, and culture as the book discusses Hinduism, Indian dress, and baseball, among other topics. The language is crisp, specific, and concise, making it a perfect read-aloud for young children or an independent read for early elementary grades. The vibrant illustrations swirl with the colors of a marketplace, where there might be too many choices, but this small girl can handle it. What a celebration of self! This is a joyful book, for every age. VERDICT This rhythmic picture book articulates a common experience for young children who straddle two cultures. Highly recommended.--Tracey S. Hodges
Librarian's View
Displaying 1 of 1