A New Friend by Lucy Menzies, illustrated by Maddy Vian

A New Friend
by Lucy Menzies, illustrated by Maddy Vian
Frances Lincoln Children’s Book/ Quarto Group

A New Friend is a heartwarming tale of a new friendship made at school, told from two perspectives through an innovative split book format.

Follow the heartwarming story of a new friendship in this innovative title, comprised of two books telling two different perspectives of the story of Joe and Mae!

It’s Joe’s first day at a new school. It’s big, scary and different. He misses his school, his old friends and his old life. Can’t he just go back to the way things were?

When Mae hears that there’s a new kid starting school, she can’t wait to meet him. Is this her chance to make a true friend? 

A New Friend is the next book in the One Book, Two Stories format. With this innovative format, two books, telling two different stories, are bound together.

One book follows Joe on his first day at school, and the other shows Mae on her quest to make friends with the new kid. The stories can also be read side-by-side, as spreads from each book complement each other and are linked with corresponding page numbers. The final spread at the back of the book reveals a shared ending, in which Joe and Mae are united in the playground!

This uplifting tale of overcoming fears and making new friends is the perfect gift for anyone struggling with new challenges, and the innovative format means kids can read the story again and again, each time in different ways!

 

Cover image and summary via Edelweiss

Posted in Books, Reviews

Review: The Arabic Quilt by Aya Khalil

   Review: The Arabic Quilt: An Immigrant Story

Khalil, Aya. The Arabic Quilt: An Immigrant Story. Illus. by Anait Semirdzhyan. 2020. 36p. Tilbury House, $17.95. (9780884487548). K-Gr 3.

Egyptian American Kanzi and her family have just moved to a new town where Kanzi will be starting third grade. Her Baba tells her he’s packed her favorite kofta sandwich for lunch, but Kanzi secretly wishes he had made peanut butter and jelly, because she doesn’t want to be “different.” When Kanzi forgets her lunch, her Mama brings it to school and speaks to her in Arabic, calling her “habibti.” Molly, one of Kanzi’s classmates, overhears and mocks both of them while another classmate laughs along. When Mrs. Haugen, Kanzi’s teacher, discovers her new student in tears, she tells Kanzi that “being bilingual is beautiful” and that she shouldn’t let anyone make her feel ashamed. Mrs. Haugen’s response models and reinforces the importance of educators recognizing and affirming student identity. Despite this positive message, Kanzi is still anxious about fitting in, and asks her mother to pack her a turkey sandwich for lunch the next day, rather than the leftover shurbet ‘ads.

That evening, wrapped in her Teita’s quilt, Kanzi writes a poem that inspires a classroom quilt project, with her teacher, Mrs. Haugen facilitating a discussion of English words that come from Arabic, language appreciation, and acceptance. Kanzi and her mother write student names in Arabic to add to a classroom quilt, and Kanzi finds pride and love in the languages she speaks.

Khalil’s words include intentional and specific details that convey Egyptian culture, from food to music. Mrs. Haugen’s language lesson validates Kanzi’s own background knowledge of Arabic and fosters a heartwarming pride. Particularly moving is a text where Kanzi watches her mother in class and thinks “how beautiful she looks.” In one of the last spreads, Kanzi sees another quilt across the hall, and meets Kura, who helped her classmates write their names in Japanese (Katakana). In the final scene, Kanzi writes a poem for her parents, thanking them for always encouraging her to be proud of speaking a different language. 

Muted, gentle illustrations and Semirdzhyan’s use of white space centers the focus on Kanzi, the students, and her family. Small details such as patterns on dishes, a tablecloth, and Kanzi’s father’s vest, and the newspaper (in Arabic) he is reading on Egyptian News, richly convey elements of Egyptian culture. Teita’s quilt itself is colorful and bright and depicts feluccas on the Nile and there is a photograph of Teita sewing the quilt. The family also has photos of protestors and a tennis player that appears to be Serena Williams in their home. Kanzi’s father appears to be a Black Arab Egyptian, while her mother is light-skinned, Kanzi and her brother Zacharia also have brown skin. A glossary of Egyptian Arabic terms is included.