The scooter twins

Dorothy Ellen Palmer, 1955-

Book - 2024

"Melanie and Melvin may be twins, but they couldn't be more different. Melanie is LOUD and Melvin is quiet. Melvin likes frogs and Melanie loves MOTORCYCLES! When the twins learn that they will get their very own mobility scooters, Melanie is excited to race to school, but Melvin is worried he'll fall -- and that people will stare. And there's a problem: Grandma can't afford the scooters without selling one of Mom's treasured paintings, one of the only things the twins have left to remember their parents. In the process of getting their scooters, Melanie and Melvin have to navigate challenges that people with disabilities face on a daily basis: rudeness from a store clerk and products that aren't made with... kids in mind. But in the end, Melanie and Melvin choose scooters that are just right for them and make moving through their neighborhood a new adventure. Written by disability advocate and mobility scooter user Dorothy Ellen Palmer, and illustrated by Maria Sweeney, The Scooter Twins is an #ownvoices story story that shares the joys and challenges of disabled childhood, and offers many kids who get new wheels the opportunity to find themselves in the pages of a book."--

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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room New Shelf jE/Palmer (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Fiction
Picture books
Published
Toronto ; Berkeley : Groundwood Books/House of Anansi Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Dorothy Ellen Palmer, 1955- (author)
Other Authors
Maria Sweeney (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations ; 24 x 27 cm
Issued also in electronic formats
ISBN
9781773066295
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Twins feel mixed emotions when their doctor recommends mobility scooters. On Melanie and Melvin's eighth birthday, Dr. Singh gives the siblings an "unexpected present": She tells them that they should use mobility scooters for their long walk to school. Motorcycle-loving Melanie can't wait to "zoom like the wind"; she's "tired of being left behind." Reading about curb cuts, which make sidewalks more accessible, lessens Melvin's fears of falling, but he worries people will stare. And Grandma says scooters are expensive. They'll have to sell one of Mom's paintings--losing another link to their deceased parents. Palmer, a scooter user herself, sympathetically highlights how these devices are seldom marketed with kids in mind: The clerk at the Accessibility Store initially assumes that Grandma is the customer, and some scooter models provoke the twins to protest they're "eight, not eighty" and "disabled, not dying." Though both find their ideal scooters, the delivery is bittersweet; Melanie's scooter is slower than she imagined despite its wolf-shaped handlebars, and Melvin refuses to move, even though his is "little-green-frog perfect." But recalling their parents' wise words bolsters their confidence. Mitigating the somewhat stilted dialogue, Sweeney's warm-hued illustrations convey the twins' emotions, and despite its "ancient" furniture, Grandma's small apartment is cluttered with comfortingly cozy details. Melvin, Melanie, and Grandma have light brown skin, while Dr. Singh is cued South Asian. An educational, reassuring take on disability and loss. (Picture book. 6-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.