Review by Kirkus Book Review
A young girl explores how she feels when she is with her father. Roussey's illustrations stand out, the ink-drawn girl tiny next to her father's gigantic hands, emphasizing just how outsized his influence on her and her emotions is. When she gives her dad a hug, she feels "like / a little bird in a warm, comfy nest. / When I am with my dad, I feel safe." The picture may be difficult for literal thinkers to puzzle out: The girl rests in a house-shaped space superimposed on a tree that resembles a green lollipop. Her dad's giant left hand waters the tree; his right lays a blanket on the girl. Dad also makes her feel "brave," "daring," "confident" in her abilities (she rides a two-wheeler across the back of his hand), "adventurous" (at the pool), "playful," "calm," "excited," "angry," and "peaceful and happy again." But "No matter what I am feeling / . / I love my dad, / and my dad loves me." Dad's extremities are the only parts of him visible, and both he and his daughter are paper-white, she with bobbed dark hair tied with a red bow. As with other titles in the Growing Hearts series, this one has thick board pages, but oddly, unlike the others, this one lacks the die cuts and flaps that make thick pages a necessity.Familiar emotions writ large. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.