Skip to main content
Displaying 1 of 1
The magical yet
2020
Availability
Large Cover Image
Trade Reviews
Publishers Weekly Review
Uplifting verse by DiTerlizzi (Just Add Glitter) takes its cue from the popular "growth mindset" educational movement, which encourages kids to see failure as a temporary setback instead of the final verdict. Digital vignettes by Alvarez (Starring Carmen!) follow a brown-skinned girl learning to ride a bicycle: "Then, when you thought you were on the right track,/ you popped a wheelie and fell on your back." She walks the bike home, scowling. "No riding for you," DiTerlizzi writes, voicing the girl's discouragement, "you'll walk... forever." A burst of fuchsia light appears: it's the Magical Yet, a flying sprite with delicate, flowerlike petals who "finds a way,/ even when you don't." Metered verse describes children overcoming blunders ("Yet doesn't mind... fixes, and flops"), which Alvarez illustrates with crisp-edged, animation-style images: one child becomes a ballet dancer, another completes an ambitious painting after a sloppy paint spill. With splashy artwork and catchy rhymes, the creators give families and educators a tool that spurs kids on to success. Ages 3--5. Author's agent: Elena Giovinazzo, Pippin Properties. Illustrator's agent: Anne Moore Armstrong, the Bright Agency. (Apr.)
School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 1--A child with brown skin and curly brown hair stands sadly in the rain next to a bike with a crumpled front wheel, then picks up the bike and starts riding. On the way, the child discovers a small glowing orb that blooms into an adorable flowery creature, the titular Magical Yet! The text explains that everyone has a Yet, a helpful reminder to keep striving, whatever their goal may be. With the Yet's encouragement, the young child repairs the bike and tries the hill again, this time riding triumphantly off into the sunset. DiTerlizzi's rhyming text flows crisply across each page, and the creative wordplay employs parentheses, colons, and ellipses to help create a dramatic and musical reading. Bright, geometric, illustrations with a warm and rich color palette show an incredibly diverse set of young enthusiasts painting, playing, and creating in all sorts of media. Special attention is given to a young male dancer, who is then shown as an adult soaring gracefully across the page. Thoughtful details abound, such as on the final pages where we see the main character, now grown, surrounded by pictures of bike journeys taken in far-off lands, bike blueprints, designs, and awards. VERDICT An inclusive and joyful addition to most libraries.--Laken Hottle, Providence Community Library
Librarian's View
Displaying 1 of 1