You Are My Pride
A Love Letter from Your Motherland
by Carole Boston Weatherford
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
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Pub Date Jan 10 2023 | Archive Date Jan 03 2023
Astra Publishing House | Astra Young Readers
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Description
Written in the voice of Mother Africa, who speaks to her children—human beings—this stunning picture book thrums with the love between mother and child as it celebrates humanity’s common roots.
Before words or tools or fire, Mother Africa’s caves sheltered us and her forests fed us. She could not protect us from all dangers, but, like mothers everywhere, she gave her children all she could and sent us into the world with confidence and love. Told in the ringing, singing language of a creation story, this book is a love letter from mother to child that honors our shared history.
Includes back matter with nonfiction information about human evolution and about the migration of Homo sapiens from Africa around the globe.
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781635923872 |
PRICE | $17.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 40 |
Featured Reviews
With YOU ARE MY PRIDE, Carole Boston Weatherford has devised a fascinating way to tell the story of evolution to children while also making clear that humans need to take care of the earth in turn. The words are beautiful and lyrical, not overwhelming the page or the reader. The watercolor illustrations from E. B. Lewis, bring the connection between all humanity and the earth to life, with progressively more detailed images of Boston Weatherford’s words.
This book shares the history of Africa as told by mother the mother of humanity. Starting from the creation of the land, moving through evolution, including neanderthals and other early peoples to the time of European exploration, without really touching on colonialism. The end of the book features a more in depth history of Africa. The illustrations are beautiful and have interesting texture and details. I think this book would be a great introduction to a unit on Geography of Africa or for an art lesson. I would recommend this book to parents and teachers of children in the age 4-11 range. Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for giving me the chance to read and review this book.
This is a beautiful book. I loved the extra content and the idea of using a lyrical format to teach children about science. I do feel, however, that this book will appeal more to adults than to children. The illustrations are beautifully rendered watercolors of expansive vistas and long-forgotten ancestors, but not truly eye-catching to a young audience. I still gave this high marks for being a good tool to use within a lesson plan, but, again, I don't think this is a book a child will pick up for fun.
For all readers, in books, there should come a time when we are reminded of who we are & from whence we came. Those books help guide us with tender recollections of the paths we have traversed to arrive at the present day; great wealth is held. Within this particular picture book, Boston Weatherford offers young readers a series of numbed & earthy illustrations set as the backdrop to poeticized hymns; gifting the reader the reminder that they are part of so much more than they might think to remember.
What I love the most about this book is that the illustrations act as a series of developments that can be appreciated as a standalone feature whereas the same could be said for the prose. I found myself drifting into the world of the paintbrush whose strokes brightened the page. Whereas other times I had to remember that there were pictures to guide the words that had enamoured me. Together these aspects work in tandem to provide a book that is gentle, warm, homely, & loving.
Not everyone has the privilege of knowledge, not everyone knows to whom they belong; who their family is, & where their ancestors came from. These aspects of a person's life might lead one to feel ostracized & sad. Within this book I believe that these moments can find reprieve; the sentiments of loneliness in the vast worlds of faces are set aside, if only for a moment so that the reader remembers that they belong to the earth & it is from the earth for whence they came.
With that being said, this book gives me the feeling of being very specifically targeted—this is not a bad thing. I appreciate when authors have a set audience in mind or when they provide subtle guides within a story so that it may be found by the person who needs it the most. I suppose it could also be true that I am reading into something that is not fact. Regardless, if you are a person for whom the connection to the land might feel a forlorn longing, these pages might hold some comfort.
This book would be ideally enjoyed by a guardian figure who reads alongside the younger individual as the prose is quite advanced & might be confusing to interpret. However, with some repetition & steady practice, I think this will come to be remembered as a book that holds much love to be gifted to the reader, all within the guise of the evolution of the species.
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Biographies & Memoirs, LGBTQIAP+, Parenting & Families