<p><b>Erin Frankel</b> is a children's book author who loves telling stories of empathy and wonder. Her picture books include <i>Mary Oliver, Holding on to Wonder, A Plate of Hope: The Inspiring Story</i><i>of</i><i>Chef José Andrés and World Central Kitchen,</i> the <i>Weird!</i> series and <i>Remembering Barkley</i>. Erin enjoys visiting schools to talk to students about stories and kindness. She lives with her family in Pittsburgh, where she writes, teaches, and hopes.</p><br><p>Paula Heaphy is a print and pattern designer in the fashion industry.</p><p>She’s an explorer of all artistic mediums from glassblowing to shoemaking, but her biggest love is drawing. She jumped at the chance to illustrate her friend Erin’s story, having been bullied herself as a child. As the character of Luisa came to life on paper, Paula felt her path in life suddenly shift into focus.</p><p>She lives in Brooklyn, New York, where she hopes to use her creativity to light up the hearts of children for years to come.</p>
Description
Three stories told from the perspectives of three different children: one who is bullied (<i>Weird!</i>), a bystander (<i>Dare!</i>), and the bully herself (<i>Tough!</i>). Each title shows readers, through the texts and the expressive ink illustrations, what each child feels. In <i>Weird!</i> Luisa is portrayed as a bubbly and vibrant character wearing her beloved polka-dot boots everywhere she goes. Then she is tormented by Sam, and her uniqueness and confidence become liabilities instead of strengths, and she throws away her boots. It isn’t until a bystander, Jayla, stands up to the bully and returns Luisa’s footwear that the book ends on a positive note with the victim confidence restored. Following the stories, nonfiction sections offer tips from each character’s perspective or suggest simple group activities that model positive behaviors. Each title also has talking points and discussion questions, so readers can go back into the story and discuss what is occurring and how they might be able to change the outcome in a real-world scenario. The books stand alone as separate titles, but they’re much more effective when utilized together to give a complete view of how the main characters are feeling and the outside events that help shape their roles. For example, Sam, the bully, is being taunted at home by an older brother–setting her up to then find someone that she can pick on at school. These will be useful titles particularly for schools, but also for public libraries that see a fair number of requests for character-education titles.