List
List
Willis, Jeanne
In any discussion of disability in children s literature, this title is bound to be the first book mentioned
and it is certainly one of the best. Winner of the Nasen Special Educational Needs Book Award on
hardback publication in 1999, it has lost none of its impact today. In wonderfully dynamic pictures, we
see Susan laughing and singing, splashing and swimming, hiding and spinning and doing all the ordinary,
active things children do. She is also fearful sometimes, and is sad when things don t go well and,
horrors, she can even be naughty! With a loving family and lots of friends, Susan is a child full of life and
fun. It is only on the last page we see that she uses a wheelchair: That is Susan through and through
just like me, just like you. This reissue can only confirm the importance of seeing children with
disabilities in books. Unfortunately, it is still comparatively rare that one finds excellence in such stories.
Category: Under 5s Pre-School/Nursery/Infant. Rating: 5 (Unmissable). 2011, Andersen, 32pp, Ages 0 to
4.
Reviewer: Elizabeth Schlenther (Books for Keeps)
ISBN(s): 9781842709900, 1842709909, 0805065016, 9780805065015
(Additional reviews, award info, and reading program info available on CLCD.)
sympathy. This is a good, basic explanation of AS and how it affects not only the child himself, but those
around him. An American production. Category: 5-8 Infant/Junior. Rating: 3 (Good). Skeezel Press, 56pp,
Ages 5 to 8.
Reviewer: Elizabeth Schlenther (Books for Keeps)
ISBN(s): 9780974721712, 0974721719
(Additional reviews and award info available on CLCD.)
My Pal, Victor
Bertrand, Diane Gonzales
My Pal, Victor/Mi amigo, Vctor is a beautiful and insightful portrait of true friendship. The book is about
two boys, Victor and Dominic, who enjoy a variety of typical activities including storytelling, baseball,
riddles, swimming, roller coasters, coloring, fishing, and playing in the park. Victor tells the funniest
jokes, swims better than a fish, loves the wildest amusement park rides, claps the loudest for his friend
at baseball games, and above all accepts Dominic just as he is. The typicality of their relationship
becomes something more profound when we learn that Victor is disabled and lives his open-hearted,
fully active life from a wheelchair. The writing is unique and full of movement. For example, the author
describes scary ghost tales as heart-booming stories in which even goose bumps get scared. The
Spanish text is paralleled throughout and is just as exciting. A bilingual vocabulary list is included. The
illustrations are bright, colorful and active, underscoring the author s message. All the elements of this
book work together to provide children and adults with a story that is both heartwarming and thought
provoking. 2004, Raven Tree Press, $16.95. Ages 5 up.
Reviewer: Michelle Negron Bueno (Childrens Literature)
ISBN(s): 0972019294, 9780972019293
(Award info and reading program info available on CLCD.)
meets new friends who use sign language to communicate. Soon, he is a member of a new band that
uses sign language to play their instruments and sing. With colorful drawings and text, this book shows
how what is considered by some to be a handicap can actually develop into something quite different.
Although the setting may be a bit difficult for many younger ones to identify with, the story itself is easy
to get involved in. This story could be useful for deaf awareness, vocabulary development, and putting
words to sound. Fiction. Grades K-3. 2006, Putnam, Unpaged., $16.99. Ages 5 to 9.
Reviewer: Deborah Paratore (The Lorgnette)
ISBN(s): 039924316X
(Additional reviews, award info, and reading program info available on CLCD.)
Featherless
Herrera, Juan Felipe
Tomasito is a young Hispanic boy with spina bifida who is attending a new school. Everyone wants to
know why he s confined to a wheelchair. He often feels like a featherless bird that needs his freedom.
He discovers he can experience freedom on the soccer field. Tomasito finds a true friend that believes in
him and what he can do from a wheelchair. Bilingual children will enjoy the two languages in this book,
along with the reassurance that moving is not so bad. Fiction. Grades 3-5. 2004, Childrens Book Press,
30p., $16.95. Ages 8 to 11.
Just Because
Elliott, Rebecca
Since Scope s In the Picture campaign, there has been more emphasis on showing children with
disabilities in picture books, but still nowhere near enough. This book by a mother who knows all about
disability is a remarkable creation. Using her own two children, Clemmie, who is severely disabled, and
Toby, her younger brother, Elliott shows us just how close siblings can be and how little disability
matters to a younger member of the family. Toby accepts that Clemmie will never walk or talk, cook
macaroni, pilot a plane, juggle, or do algebra , but he knows she is special, beautiful, like a Princess,
accepting of his noise, and sometimes making him laugh. She doesn t like some things, like his
drawings of pigeons and having her hair brushed, but she enjoys their pet ladybird because he tickles
her hands . Toby likes her wheelchair; last week they went to the moon on it , and Clemmie accepts
Toby just as he is too, even when he chases the cat and eats the crayons. And when there is a big storm,
it is Clemmie who is brave and likes the noise and who helps Toby feel better. Particularly moving
because these are real people in a real family, even though the bright and cheerful illustrations are of
doll-like children, this story adds greatly to our understanding of how normal living with a disabled
child can be. With praise from both Jacqueline Wilson and Michael Rosen, this is a book to be enjoyed
both in the classroom and in the home. Category: Under 5s Pre-School/Nursery/Infant. Rating: 4 (Very
Good). 2010, Lion, 32pp. Ages 0 to 4.
Reviewer: Elizabeth Schlenther (Books for Keeps)
ISBN(s): 9780745962672, 074596267X, 9780745962351
(Additional reviews and award info available on CLCD.)
My Brother Charlie
Peete, Holly Robinson
Charlie and Callie share a special bond as twins. They are alike yet different. As Callie tells the story
about her brother who is two minutes older, she reveals that he has autism. In a sisterly, warmhearted
manner, Callie provides her view of her brother as she tells about Charlie s many special talents like the
way he handles their dog, Harriett. She describes how Charlie s world is different when he
communicates; she tries to understand his differences with sisterly patience and love. Callie s story
reveals the compassion and love of a family who values Charlie for who he is. They celebrate his growing
list of accomplishments. From the story, the lines Charlie has autism. But autism doesn t have
Charlie are a part of the heart-rich and passionate theme. Illustrations warmly fill the pages of this
loving story based on the authors experiences. At the back of the book, the authors intents are
explained. This story helps to shed some light on autism and how one family faces the challenges and
celebrates progresses. 2010, Scholastic Press/Scholastic Inc, $16.99. Ages 4 to 8.
Reviewer: Carrie Hane Hung (Childrens Literature)
ISBN(s): 9780545094665
(Additional reviews, award info, and reading program info available on CLCD.)
We Go in a Circle
Anderson, Peggy Perry
This uplifting tale is relayed through the eyes of a racehorse. When the horse is the fastest, strongest
horse on the track, he feels special and important. But after his leg is injured, he must learn to live a
different kind of life in a new place. Thankfully, the horse is well cared for. After being combed and
brushed one day he is fitted with an unusual saddle, and a boy who arrives in a wheelchair is placed on
his back. A walk around the ring makes both the young rider and the horse feel special and important.
With economy of words and effective, colorful drawings, the author conveys the circle of hope drawn by
the involvement of horses and volunteers who offer freedom for the disabled through a special form of
physical therapy. Some of the disabled cannot walk, talk or even see, but with hippo therapy they are
able to break through the confines of their physical limitations. An encounter at a therapy ranch in
Oklahoma, one of many such ranches in operation throughout the country, inspired this book. It is there
Peggy Anderson meets a twelve-year-old boy who has been riding since he was eighteen months old.
Hunter is an amazing example of the progress possible through this type of therapy as the rocking
motion of the horse relaxes tight muscles and strengthens weak ones. A concluding note explains more
about the program. Hopefully, this book will enlighten readers, produce new volunteers, open fresh
avenues of hope for some and rewarding possibilities for all. 2004, Houghton Mifflin, $15.00. Ages 4 to
8.
Reviewer: Francine Thomas (Childrens Literature)
ISBN(s): 0618447563, 9780618447565, 9780547772882, 0547772882