Children's Starred Reviews

Inheritanc­e: A Visual Poem

-

Elizabeth Acevedo, illus. by Andrea Pippins. Quill Tree, $16.99 (48p) ISBN 978-0-06-293194-8

In spoken-word lines that explicate the tension between what people say and what they mean, Acevedo (Clap When You Land) confronts the cultural specter of hair-related prejudice through the lens of colonial history and Afro-Dominican identity. “Some people tell me to ‘fix’ my hair. And by fix, they mean straighten; they mean whiten”—but, the poem’s speaker intones, “how do you fix this shipwrecke­d history of hair?” Centering figures with brown skin of varying tones, Pippins’s (Young Gifted and Black) bold-hued, unlined art portrays curls, coils, and elaborate road map cornrows, including a design with a ship at its center. A subsequent spread centers a salon offering blowouts and roller sets: “We’re told Dominicans do the best hair. We can wash, set, flatten the spring in any lock.” But the context behind those words, the lines indicate, aligns with colonial beauty standards: “What they mean is: Why would you date a Black man?” and “Have you thought about your daughter’s hair?” Embracing the beauty of Afro-Latinidad hair exactly as it is, Acevedo affirms, “Our children will be beautiful... Oh, how I will braid pride

down their backs, and from the moment they leave the womb, they will be born in love with themselves.” Ages 13–up.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States