FICTION

My Blue Is Happy

illus. by Catia Chien. 32p. Candlewick. Aug. 2013. Tr $15.99. ISBN 978-0-7636-5125-1. LC 2012950616.
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Gr 1–3—In this engaging story, a little girl realizes that not everyone feels the same about colors. Her sister sees blue as sad and associates it with lonely songs. But the protagonist sees it as happy because it reminds her of her favorite jeans and the pool on a hot day. Dad says brown is ordinary like a paper bag but chocolate syrup is the association that the child makes. Art teachers will gravitate toward this upbeat title to let children begin to explore the importance of color. Chien's illustrations are appropriately vibrant and allow for the different interpretations that the text suggests. This idea of colors and the associations youngsters have about them is an interesting subject and would make for some great writing activities. How do you feel when you see red? How about violet or orange? Having children compare their notions of the same colors would make for some great conversations. This child knows her own mind and feelings and isn't about to have someone else's associations color her world. Use the story with Emma Dodd's Dog's Colorful Day (Dutton, 2001), Roseanne Thong's Red Is a Dragon (Chronicle, 2001), Ellen Stoll Walsh's Mouse Paint (Houghton Harcourt, 1989), and Jane Brocket's Ruby, Violet, Lime (Millbrook, 2012) to further explore color with children.—Joan Kindig, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA
Some people may think of blue as a sad color, but the little girl narrator of this picture book has her own opinion about that, and her blue is happy. Her mother finds yellow to be “cheery…like the summer sun,” but the little girl’s yellow “is worried / Like a wilting flower / And a butterfly caught in a net.” Dad thinks brown is “ordinary / Like a plain paper bag,” but our narrator’s brown is “special / Like chocolate syrup… / And a piece of earth / that’s just for me.” It’s at once a celebration of the world and its colors and a book about feelings and perceptions, contrasting the differences between the way two people see the same thing. Chien’s acrylic paintings fill the pages with intense shades of the featured colors (especially striking is a double-page spread depicting green “as old as a forest”), while reflecting the human relationships with humor and tenderness through facial expressions and body language. Readers and young listeners can have some good conversations about their own color perceptions after sharing this warm, deceptively simple concept book. susan dove lempke

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