Wanda the Brave
Wanda the Brave
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2022--
Paperback ©2024--
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Interlink Publishing Group, Inc.
Just the Series: Wanda   

Series and Publisher: Wanda   

Annotation: Meet Wanda, with her glorious head of hair. Written and illustrated by the South African team who brought you the award-... more
 
Reviews: 3
Catalog Number: #849784
Format: Paperback
Copyright Date: 2024
Edition Date: 2024 Release Date: 09/10/24
ISBN: 1-623-71665-9
ISBN 13: 978-1-623-71665-3
Dewey: E
Language: English
Reviews:
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

Starred Review Nontshokweni turns the familiar story of a Black girl learning to love her hair on its head by featuring a young queen with a healthy pride in her locks. Wanda is excited for her salon day with Aunty Ada, a tall-as-a-tree woman who runs a hair salon for kids. Wanda takes a seat and shows her a picture of the style she wants: a fancy arrangement of cornrows and beads. However, Aunty Ada has a different idea. Without permission, she puts a powerful (and painful!) chemical onto Wanda's hair to straighten it, telling Wanda that "you have to suffer a little bit for beauty." Eventually, an assistant washes out the chemical, and Aunty Ada braids Wanda's crown. When Wanda's mother arrives, she is horrified by her daughter's experience; she reprimands Aunty Ada and tells Wanda that no one has a right to touch her hair or body in a way that makes her feel uncomfortable. Readers familiar with the salon experience will find resonance in the cultural backdrop of the illustrations, which feature bright, uplifting colors as well as Aunty Ada's patterned outfit and headwrap. A natural companion to Derrick Barnes' Crown: An Ode to the Fresh Cut (2017), this is also an excellent book to help relay the message inherent to California's 2019 CROWN Act.

Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

Sometimes kids must speak out until adults listen.In this follow-up to Wanda (2021), co-authored by Mathabo Tlali and also set in South Africa, the protagonist and her mom go to O'Natural, a hair salon for children run by Aunty Ada. Wanda has brought a picture of a complicated, "pineapple-looking," braided hairstyle she wants, but Aunty Ada dismisses Wanda's wishes because the salon is busy. Aunty Ada slathers Vaseline and then cream on Wanda's hair, and it starts to burn. She and Nkiruka, another girl, protest, but Ada tells them "ubuhle buyasetyenzelwa," isiXhosa (a South African Bantu language) for "One works hard for beauty," and insists that the straightening chemicals remain in their hair longer despite the pain. Both girls confide that their teachers call their hair a bird's nest when they wear it natural, and together they sing a protest song to get Aunty Ada to wash out the relaxer. The two are successful, their determination conveying a crucial lesson both to Aunty Ada and to readers about bodily autonomy. This story sheds light on a common beauty practice of chemically straightening Black hair-a process that often causes painful scalp burns. This brightly colored picture book, dominated by pinks and purples, showcases the beauty of brown skin and natural Black hair, as well as the versatility of hair, and spotlights beauty practices common throughout the African diaspora. (This book was reviewed digitally.)Whether a mirror or window for readers, this culturally rich story exemplifies the importance of self-advocacy. (glossary) (Picture book. 4-7)

Kirkus Reviews (Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

Sometimes kids must speak out until adults listen.In this follow-up to Wanda (2021), co-authored by Mathabo Tlali and also set in South Africa, the protagonist and her mom go to O'Natural, a hair salon for children run by Aunty Ada. Wanda has brought a picture of a complicated, "pineapple-looking," braided hairstyle she wants, but Aunty Ada dismisses Wanda's wishes because the salon is busy. Aunty Ada slathers Vaseline and then cream on Wanda's hair, and it starts to burn. She and Nkiruka, another girl, protest, but Ada tells them "ubuhle buyasetyenzelwa," isiXhosa (a South African Bantu language) for "One works hard for beauty," and insists that the straightening chemicals remain in their hair longer despite the pain. Both girls confide that their teachers call their hair a bird's nest when they wear it natural, and together they sing a protest song to get Aunty Ada to wash out the relaxer. The two are successful, their determination conveying a crucial lesson both to Aunty Ada and to readers about bodily autonomy. This story sheds light on a common beauty practice of chemically straightening Black hair-a process that often causes painful scalp burns. This brightly colored picture book, dominated by pinks and purples, showcases the beauty of brown skin and natural Black hair, as well as the versatility of hair, and spotlights beauty practices common throughout the African diaspora. (This book was reviewed digitally.)Whether a mirror or window for readers, this culturally rich story exemplifies the importance of self-advocacy. (glossary) (Picture book. 4-7)

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Starred Review ALA Booklist (Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Kirkus Reviews (Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Reading Level: 1.0
Interest Level: P-2

Meet Wanda, with her glorious head of hair. Written and illustrated by the South African team who brought you the award-winning book Wanda.

Today, Wanda is visiting the hair salon where she’ll use all the hair secrets Makhulu taught her. But Aunty Ada wants her to straighten her hair with a white chemical. Wanda and her new friend Nkiruka come up with a plan and both girls stand strong and brave in the face of this big challenge.

Bold and zesty, Wanda the Brave is a celebration of girl power, and a reminder that courage and friendship is a mighty force!


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