by Ana Aranda (Author) Ana Aranda (Illustrator)
A family honors their living and dead relatives as they celebrate this holiday with shared food and stories.
The Day of the Dead is a happy day when Mar's family gathers together. There are favorite dishes to enjoy, games to be played, and most importantly, stories to tell. No one in the family is forgotten because this is the day of the year when the dead come to visit the living--and for this holiday it is almost as if they're alive again, as the family takes great joy in celebrating the things that made them special. Mar realizes she is just like her Grandpa Ramón, who kept a journal. And her sister, Paz, plays accordion, just like their great-grandfather. There are so many things that connect them all--and at dinner, Abuelita spins even more stories that make them feel close to the ones they will love forever. Ana Aranda's tender text and vibrant art make the joy felt on this sweet day totally palpable.
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K-Gr 3--In her authorial debut, Aranda, illustrator of The Chupacabra Ate Our Candelabra, delivers a charming ode to the Latinx Day of the Dead holiday. A little girl narrates this sweet tale that takes readers through her family's preparations for the event that occurs every November 1st through 2nd, in which families honor those who came before with altars, poems, marigolds, and sugar skeletons. Mar and her sister Paz learn how to make Tia Lucha's favorite tamales, Paz practices their great-grandfather's accordion, and they read through Grandpa Ramón's travel journals. The importance of family, storytelling, and tradition shines through the text and joyous textured illustrations, rendered in watercolor, ink, gouache, and a little bit of Himalayan salt on the paper. Warm and vibrant hues, such as the orange of the marigolds and the bright colors of the papel picado, add to the lively, celebratory mood. The end papers feature a family tree that shows which of the relatives have departed and which ones are still alive. Calaveras, or skulls, and living people mingle throughout, but the joy-filled celebration is especially evident during the fiesta scenes. The matter-of-fact text contains not a hint of fear or mourning, which might be just the right tone for some children with a recent death in the family, making this a perennial title and not one to relegate to Day of the Dead shelves or displays. The living characters all have tan skin and dark hair. A short author's note concludes the book. VERDICT Great fun; a strong choice for picture book collections.--Shelley M. Diaz
Copyright 2022 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.Opening with a naïf-style family tree, Aranda offers a joyful, accessible introduction to a beloved holiday via one family's preparations. Watercolor, ink, and gouache art, redolent with festive magenta, turquoise, and violet hues, first follows pigtailed siblings Mar and Paz into town to buy marigolds and sugar skulls. Back at home, decorating and cooking give way to arrivals of living relations, portrayed with varying brown skin tones, and of departed relatives. The latter--represented with smiling painted skulls and surrounded by embellishments that reference their passions--hover approvingly alongside the family, rendering the line between past and present a happy blur. The party moves into high gear when Abuelita, who "knows all the family stories," arrives in a swirling cloud of monarch butterflies. "We feel close to everyone," says Mar, amid the singing, dancing, and reminiscing, "the living and the dead." An author's note closes. Ages 3-7. (Sept.)
Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.