Review by Kirkus Book Review
Everybody's a critic.Lucy, an elementary-age white girl who appears to live alone with her cat, is an artist, painting happily in her garden until a reporter from the local paper comes by. "I am painting the color of laughter," she explains. The reporter scoffs: "It looks like JELLYBEAN SOUP!" Nevertheless, the press brings curious art lovers to see for themselves. One thinks the laughter should be louder; another is disappointed that it's not actually jelly-bean soup. With each complaint, Lucy changes her painting. More visitors come, each demanding that Lucy create something that in some way represents their own self-interest. Only her cat supports her vision. When a "big-city critic" declares her work insufficiently "FEROCIOUS," Lucy tries hard to please, "splatter[ing] the beautiful painting with ink and garbage and mud," but the critic is not impressed. The cat comforts a glum Lucy, quietly encouraging her to return to her own styleand when she does, she's happy again. Fernandes' illustrations borrow both palette and a sense of vegetative lushness from Gauguin; Lucy's creations are almost wholly abstract. She is also the only human in the storyall the carping critics are anthropomorphic animals, lending a sense of fun and softening the unkindness of their remarks. The text shares the illustrations' whimsy, delighting in words as much as Lucy delights in her art.A valuable lesson in pursuing your own artistic star. (Picture book. 5-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.