by Lian Cho (Author) Lian Cho (Illustrator)
Debut author-illustrator Lian Cho delivers a hilariously cheeky picture book that celebrates the creativity of a young girl who breaks from the rigid traditions of her famous artist parents to make a colorful splash in her own unique style.
Presenting Olive Chen! The most magnificent and brilliant artist in the whole wide world! Her parents are also artists--serious artists--who paint prim, proper, perfect shapes. They know Olive has the talent to follow in their footsteps. But Olive likes to smear, splatter, splash, and even lick. With a brush in each hand, Olive cascades through town with her friends in tow, painting what she wants to, what she feels--until she reaches her parents' pristine art museum. . .
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Olive Chen, who reads as East Asian, believes she's "the most magnificent and brilliant artist in the whole wide world," and she dresses accordingly, wearing a beret-topped ensemble of primary colors. Olive is also defiantly out of step with the rest of her sphere, which is depicted as rigidly monochromatic and form-focused; as she jubilantly paints in bright, uninhibited splatters and swirls, her artist parents and art teacher insist that crisp, inky circles, squares, and triangles are the height of artistic expression. But Olive's classmates, depicted with varying skin tones, find her art and joie de vivre irresistible. After following her lead in their own creations, they join her on a mission to repaint the whole town--and even her parents have to agree that it's a brighter, happier place for her touch. Making her solo debut and working in an array of exuberantly applied media, Cho (Oh No, the Aunts Are Here) revels in coloring outside the lines via a protagonist whose lack of self-doubt and unwillingness to go along to get along delivers an aesthetic and emotional zhuzh. Ages 4-8. Agent: Rebecca Sherman, Writers House. (Sept.)
Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.PreS-Gr 2--Olive thinks she is a fabulous artist, sloshing colorful paint everywhere; her parents believe she should be painting shapes in black and white. They send her to art school, but Olive paints her own way, and pretty soon the other kids at school want to paint their own way as well. When Olive's parents see the work the kids have done all over town, they have an unanticipated change of heart, and ask Olive to paint on some of their monochromatic single shape paintings, which Olive does. The exuberant, brightly colored, non-representational art that Olive chooses is fun, and young students will be excited to try out some of the splashing and smearing that Olive does. This is a pithy story about finding your own voice, even when adults keep coming in the way. It would be a good companion to Peter Reynolds's The Dot or Mac Barnett's Square. VERDICT A nice story about finding one's own voice regardless of the medium.--Debbie Tanner
Copyright 2023 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.Irrepressible. Joyful. Vibrant and full of oomph! Olive Chen is the artist of the year! — Andrea Beaty, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Rosie Revere, Engineer Lian
Cho has managed to bring together a visually stunning, energetic story full of clever humor, heart, and a reminder that art has no boundaries. Olive is someone we all hope to be more like! — Ruth Chan, author-illustrator of Thank You, Neighbor
Cho creates a loveable and energetic protagonist who cultivates and defines her unique art style rather than following her parents' expectations and societal norms. With a delightful, surprising ending, this will make an easy pick for little artists to celebrate the joys and triumphs of creating art with no boundaries. — Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books