SYLVESTER’S LETTER by poet Matthew Burgess earns a Kirkus starred review! 

A child creates and sends a letter to a beloved grandmother.

How does one commune with the dearly departed? Although listeners won’t know the nature of young Sylvester’s grandmother’s absence until they piece together context clues, this is the matter the child is working out. The opening depicts Sylvester drawing a picture that turns into scenes showing the heights and depths necessary to relay the message, because “Some letters can’t be delivered in the usual way.” The brown-skinned protagonist makes breakfast to energize sky divers who “form a human flower in midair,” then parachute down to a train making its way through a jungle. Following the river to the “rare pink dolphins,” Sylvester places the letter in a toy airplane and launches it; from there, it will “leap to meet the butterflies,” the ultimate carriers. Poet Burgess and artist Cochran—the team that produced Drawing on Walls (2020)—expertly capture an imaginative child’s perspective and logic with lovely, alliterative language and wordless spreads rendered in brilliant colors and markerlike scrawls. A marvelous double gatefold portrays the entire journey. Other ways of connecting include eating lunchtime pickles and learning to pickle—since G.G. (Greatest Grandma) was the “most pickle-loving person I know”—and a miraculous moment when a butterfly lands on Sylvester’s nose. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A nuanced celebration of the lasting joy that intergenerational friendship inspires.

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Kirkus called DO NOT EAT THIS BOOK! by Beth Kander “a lighthearted introduction to traditional Jewish holiday foods.”

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Reese‘s Book Club June pick is CASSANDRA IN REVERSE by Holly Smale, co-agented with the Shaw Agency!