School Library Journal Starred Review
(Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
PreS-Gr 3 Sprawled across her bed, pencil poised, Isobel, a mathematically minded young Black girl, is eager to add, subtract, multiply, and divide her way to completing her homework assignment. In charming artwork, clouds of numbers, symbols, graphs, and equations billow from her busy brain and dance across the page in a swirl of arithematical bliss. Then Isobel is distracted by the ruckus coming from her new neighbors. The equations in her head are abruptly replaced with theories of what is happening next door. Acrobats? Marching band? Conga line? Isobel worries that she will not be able to finish her assignment if the noisy neighbors can not quiet down. Engaging her problem-solving skills, Isobel whips up a batch of cookies and a note of plea for the neighbors. She unexpectedly receives a response from another girl, Bernadette, who is not anything like Isobel imagined. In her debut picture book, Everington delivers a story sure to inspire early elementary school students also beginning to learn basic math. VERDICT An imaginative read-aloud recommended for teachers wanting to connect literacy and math and for public libraries looking to upgrade their collection of girl-empowering STEAM books. Emily Brush, Novi P.L., MI
Kirkus Reviews
When the noise from next door threatens to keep quiet-loving Isobel from completing her math homework on time, she gets serious about resolving her noisy-neighbor situation.Isobel, who presents as Black, listens to the loud thumps and bumps made by her new and noisy neighbors and imagines that there must be acrobats on the other side of the shared wall. As the noise continues, Isobel thinks that the neighbors must be a marching band or even a basketball team! After a failed attempt to get back at the neighbors by making some noise of her own, Isobel comes up with a new plan. She and her father bake peanut-butter cookies and deliver them with a note asking the new neighbors to be quiet. To her surprise, she receives a note back from her new neighbor, Bernadette-an elephant. Bernadette also has math homework due Monday, and it turns out the two make a winning pair of study partners. Not only is it refreshing to read a story about a little girl who loves math, but it is also exciting to read a book in which a child learns to establish boundaries in a way that is kind and fair. Ford illustrates Isobel's reality in full color, with skewed angles to emphasize the disruption to her routines; both the equations she's trying to work and her imagined scenes are represented as monochrome, white-spaceâfilling cartoons.An adorable story about friendship and learning how to state your needs. (Picture book. 4-7)