Author JAIRO BUITRAGO has collaborated with Rafael Yockteng on several picture books, including Jimmy the Greatest! (six starred reviews), Two White Rabbits (three starred reviews), Walk with Me (three starred reviews), Lion and Mouse (two starred reviews) and Wounded Falcons (two starred reviews and named a USBBY Outstanding International Book). Jairo has also won the Hispanoamericano Castillo prize for children's literature and the Antonio García Cubas Award. He lives in Mexico City, Mexico. RAFAEL YOCKTENG has illustrated many highly acclaimed children’s books, including Afterward, Everything was Different: A Tale From the Pleistocene; Wounded Falcons (two starred reviews and named a USBBY Outstanding International Book); Jimmy the Greatest! (six starred reviews); Two White Rabbits (three starred reviews); and Walk with Me (three starred reviews) by Jairo Buitrago. Rafael’s books have been included on IBBY’s Honor List, the Horn Book Fanfare and in the White Ravens Catalogue. He lives in Bogotá, Colombia. ELISA AMADO is a Guatemalan-born author and translator. She has written My Friend (Mi amiga), illustrated by Alfonso Ruano; Un Barrilete para el Día de los Muertos / Barrilete: A Kite for the Day of the Dead; Cousins (Primas), illustrated by Luis Garay; and Tricycle (El triciclo), illustrated by Alfonso Ruano, which is on the Américas Award Commended List and is a USBBY Outstanding International Book. She lives in Toronto.
Simply outstanding . . . * Kirkus, STARRED REVIEW * Buitrago and Yockteng (Walk with Me) imagine the kinds of comfort that might console Isabel most, and readers share in the beginning of her healing. * Publishers Weekly, STARRED REVIEW * A subtle and affecting journey to resilience. * School Library Journal, STARRED REVIEW * A hopeful book about a child’s confusion and fear of abandonment. * Booklist * This is a creative, reassuring take on disruptive relocation . . . The indirectness of the approach is the story’s strength, making this a pleasing alternative to more overtly didactic tales of disrupted lives and turning time with a relative into literal magic. * The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books * This lavish picture book is a magical blend of mystery, strangeness and friendly comfort; a subtle, compassionate expression of the uncertainty and hurt of being separated from parents because of divorce. It’s also a celebration of the companionship, space and beauty nature has to offer. * Toronto Star * This understated picture book looks innocent on the surface, but holds the framework for understanding the huge impacts of parental separation and divorce. . . . [An] excellent resource to read one-on-one with a child who is going through big life changes . . . * Resource Links *