by Alain Serres (Author) Aurélia Fronty (Illustrator)
From the author and illustrator duo who created the award-winning I Have the Right to Be a Child comes this beautifully illustrated picture book about a child's right to advocate for the environment they live in.
All children have the right to learn about the world, to celebrate the water, air and sunshine, and to be curious about the animals and plants that live on our planet. All children also have the right to learn about endangered species, to be concerned about plastic in the ocean, and to understand what a changing climate means for our Earth.
Scientists tell us that every living thing is connected. When we cut down forests, we destroy animal habitats. When we throw plastic in the garbage, it never really goes away. When we spray pesticides on our fruit and vegetables, we poison the earth, animals and ourselves.
What can children do to help? All children can draw posters of endangered animals to raise awareness. All children can send a letter to the leader of their country, signed by every member of their family. All children can protest along with their parents. Children have the right to do all these things as proclaimed in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. All children have the right to try to help our Earth, in whatever ways they can.
Told from the perspective of a child, this colorful and vibrant book explores what it means to be a child who dreams of a beautiful future for their planet.
WorldCat is the world's largest library catalog, helping you find library materials online.
The author-illustrator team behind I Have the Right to Be a Child returns for this companion, in which a child narrator informs readers of the dangers humans pose to the Earth--including deforestation, habitat destruction and interconnectivity, ocean pollution, pesticides, and climate change--as well as what children can do to combat these issues, framed as rights ("Even if I'm poor, I have the right to water," Serres writes). Gouache paintings by Fronty, in an oft-abstract naïf style, feature humans of different skin tones and hair textures. Educators and conscientious older readers will perhaps best appreciate this wordy tome, and may find the book's actionable suggestions galvanizing. Ages 4-7. (Apr.)
Copyright 2021 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.