Review by Booklist Review
This snappy tribute celebrates the fierce awesomeness of sweet, strong, funny, woke, brainiac mamas. Using rhythmic stanzas that swing, a brown-skinned little girl begins each double-page spread with a "your mama" observation ("Your mama dress so fine, she could have her own clothing line," "Your mama so forgiving, she lets you keep on living"). The bright, vibrant illustrations, with text in a playful retro-tattoo style, pop off the pages, showing the girl and her mother in all sorts of circumstances: going to the library, to vote, on a picnic, and a road trip, and even just the two of them in their apartment. There are multiple references to Spanish food ("She's the cinnamon to your tembleque, the tres leches to your cake"), including some comida deliciosa at an extended family gathering. Near the end, readers are told they'll never understand how much their mama loves them, and that they're their mama's hope, prayer, push, pull, and miracle. By this point, kids will be all over that message and will be more than happy to give mamas everywhere an appropriate send-off: "So let's give her two snaps, a circle, and a twist. Mad dap, a hug, and a kiss." This joyous celebration makes a perfect read-aloud for Mother's Day--and every day.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Ramos reconfigures a well-known joke format into an uplifting, rhythmic exultation of motherhood in this bouncy debut. "Your mama so sweet, she could be a bakery,/ all frosting, powdered sugar, and pastries," opens Ramos. The first line appears in a banner on a verso page, before smoothly incorporating Spanish on the recto: "Leaves love notes in your almuerzo, homemade./ She's the cinnamon to your tembleque,/ the tres leches to your cake." Vivacious spreads by Alcantára depict a majority cast of color, centering a dynamic mother and child with light brown skin and long dark waves who attend school parent night hand-in-hand ("Your mama dress so fine"), take stacks of books to the library checkout ("Your mama a brainiac"), and "with posters homemade," attend rallies for justice ("Your mama so woke"). Parents and children alike will appreciate this thoroughly contemporary portrait of familial love. Ages 4--7. (Apr.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A lyrical, spirited picture book that takes the old "yo' mama" joke and cracks, snaps, and pops it into an ode to motherhood. Using a vibrant tattoo motif, colorful, joy-infused artwork, and playful, melodic words, Ramos and Alcántara's winning picture book celebrates motherhood at its most inspirational. A child and a mother--both with brown skin, long, wavy black hair, and long, bold limbs--spend their days baking and playing, picnicking and protesting, going to the library and taking road trips. It starts with a honeyed bang: "Your Mama So Sweet, She Could Be a Bakery," spelled out on a ribbon that could adorn a sailor's arm as narration in regular type expands on this. Each subsequent double-page spread echoes these words ("Your Mama…"), highlighting how this mom's "so strong," "so forgiving," and "so woke." Notably, readers see a mom that stands alone, strong and defiant, as she walks into her child's Parent Night at school and strolls through a neighborhood full of friends and passersby. Ramos conjures jubilant scene after scene with deft language and sprinkles of Spanish, and this tale's more sublime moments ("Your Mama a Brainiac--mo' betta than any app") simply shine. Similarly, Alcántara's art represents motherhood as a model of ideals and mind spun for modern times, both indebted to and limited by the specific type of mother of color depicted here. Overall, it's a celebration that's invaluable and needed. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10-by-20-inch double-page spreads viewed at 74% of actual size.) Perfectly dazzling. (Picture book. 4-10) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.