It's okay, just ask

Monique Leonardo Carlos

Book - 2024

"An immigration story that gently conveys that curiosity, open-mindedness, and acceptance have the power to overcome fear, close-mindedness, and rejection. It’s Okay, Just Ask is the story of a child who immigrates with her family (older sister and parents) to a new place and faces the uncertainties, fears, and wonder that come with a big change in the middle of childhood. The story is loosely based on the author’s own move to Canada from the Philippines with her family seven years ago and the ways her own two children experienced and coped with the transition. The narrative follows the family’s move through snapshot glimpses into the child’s experiences as she tries to find her place in this new home and community. Each time s...he faces a new uncertainty—on the plane when she notices that her mother is quieter than usual, or when she has questions about an unfamiliar monument in her new country, or when she wonders about the differences between herself and her new classmates—she listens to (or remembers) her mother’s words: It’s okay, just ask. This repeated refrain guides her to meet these new hurdles with open-mindedness, curiosity, and courage. And every time she chooses to just ask, she learns something new and her understanding of this transitional phase of her life and her new home, peers, and neighbors grows deeper and more nuanced. This story aims to teach children that it's okay to ask questions when they are unsure of something, especially when it comes to being confident in, open to, and respectful of the differences you notice in others' lives, cultures, and looks compared to your own!"--

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2 copies ordered
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Toronto : Owlkids Books 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Monique Leonardo Carlos (author)
Other Authors
Salini Perera, 1986- (illustrator)
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781771476140
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An inquisitive child has many questions as a family prepares to move. Mother, who has warm brown skin and black curly hair just like the young narrator's, "always says,It's okay, just ask." And the protagonist obliges, posing questions as the family packs up boxes, boards an airplane, and relocates to a coastal setting with mountains in the distance. Some queries are typical for a story about moving: "Will we ever come back?" "What if I don't make any friends?" Others break new ground. When the child asks Mother, "Are you okay?" she becomes surprisingly vulnerable in her honest answer: "Not completely." Offering Mother a hug, the child becomes the parent for a moment--a welcome reversal in a text rooted in an adult's instructions. Perera's illustrations feel intimate, from the family's expressive faces to the details of their new home: an Inuit inuksuk, the hockey game they watch on TV. Saturated earth tones portray a peaceful but somewhat homogenous suburb, which inspires the protagonist to ask, "Why is my hair black?" The mother answers, "That's how you were made," hewing to the book's evenhanded tone. The comforting refrain of "It's okay, just ask" persists throughout the story, dovetailing with the child's articulations of wise emotional responses. The tale doesn't contain a great deal of drama, but the message will certainly sink in. Tenderly reassuring and useful for sparking curiosity.(Picture book. 5-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.