Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Working in spare, scribbly lines and with Pantone coral accents, Tanco captures tender moments of discovery shared between a free-spirited mother and child, both with curly, yarnlike hair. The girl shows her mom "how to be messy" by playing with mud in the backyard. The mother teaches the girl to "see nature" while walking on a snowy lane, and, at an art museum, the daughter teaches her mother "how to see things differently" (the girl appears more in awe of a water cooler than of the art on the walls). Other activities include playing basketball and gazing at the night sky through a telescope ("even though I am small, I show you how to look further"). A chic celebration of the mother-daughter bond. Also available: You and Me, Me and You and You and Me, Me and You: Brothers. All ages. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Horn Book Review
Following You and Me, Me and You: Brothers, Tanco's book features a girl who describes how she's helpful to her mother (e.g., "I follow your lead... / and keep your secrets safe"). Tanco's characteristically spare line art--this time in black, gray, and watermelon red--effectively reveals what the narrator doesn't, as when she kicks a ball that inadvertently nearly beans her mom ("I test...your reflexes"). (c) Copyright 2021. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Tanco follows his odes to father-child and brother-brother relationships (You and Me, Me and You: Brothers, 2018, etc.) with this one dedicated to mothers and children.As in his previous titles, the author keeps readers on their toes with the page turn. The tiny tyke in these pages tests both her mother's flexibility (standing on her leg as the mom does an inverted yoga pose) and, on the next page, her reflexes (mom dodges a kicked ball). Every parent will relate to at least a few of the scenarios presented here: Children certainly show their parents a new sense of style, notice things they do not (the museum's water cooler rather than the art), and follow their lead (the two read back to back in the grass), and they do have a way of improving the mood after a long day of work. But one line spoken by the child narrator rings concerning: "Ikeep your secrets safe." Pops of orangey-red are the only spots of color, the rest black or gray against mostly white pages. Whereas the child in You and Me, Me and You, concerning fathers, was largely ungendered, the child here wears a dress and a girl's bathing suit. Mother and daughter resemble each other, with red-outlined curly/scribbly hair and pointy noses. Both are paper-white.Tanco mostly nails it: Life is about the little things, which add up to time spent together, and what's more important than that? (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.