The true story of how a simple act of kindness changed a young refugee's life--from award-winning author Patricia McCormick with Mevan Babakar.
For generations, Mevan and her family lived in their beloved Kurdistan. But when they are forced to flee by the Iraqi government, Mevan must leave everything behind. Her family travels from country to country in search of safety; and with each stop, Mevan feels more and more alone. Until . . . a stranger's gift changes everything.
Based on Mevan Babakar's own childhood, this is a moving reminder of how powerful just one act of kindness can be.
Collaborating with McCormick (Sergeant Reckless), Kurdistan-born debut author Babakar tells a story based on her own experience as a child refugee. During young Mevan's early life, "figs fell from the trees and the air smelled like honeysuckle" in Kurdistan, "a lush and hilly corner in the north of Iraq." Though she is the littlest girl in her extended family, "the love all around her made her feel ten feet tall." Then the ruler of Iraq sends soldiers and helicopters to force the people in Kurdistan away and into the mountains. Escaping in a van to Turkey, then by plane to Azerbaijan and by train to Russia, Mevan makes herself successively smaller and even wishes to become invisible. Only in the Netherlands, where the family moves two years later, does she feel welcomed, but she still makes herself small--until she's given the titular object in an act that makes her feel "a hundred feet tall." Gouache, watercolor, and crayon illustrations from Imamura (Love in the Library) capture the dappled light of Mevan's pastoral family home in Kurdistan against other landscapes' stark geometry and the feeling of possibility represented by the bicycle in this hopeful personal telling. Background characters are portrayed with various skin tones. An epilogue and author's note conclude. Ages 4-8. (May)
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