Review of Free Kid to Good Home

Free Kid to Good Home Free Kid to Good Home
by Hiroshi Ito ; illus. by the author; trans. from Japanese by Cathy Hirano
Primary     Gecko    112 pp.         g
5/22     978-1-77657-442-1     $18.99
e-book ed.  978-1-77657-452-0    $9.99

Disappointed that her new baby brother “looks just like a potato” and is always crying, a young girl heads to town to offer herself for free to a new family. She imagines she’ll have servants, a big backyard, and, most importantly, no baby brother. The spunky narrator spends the day in a cardboard box with “FREE KID” written on the front. People walk by, but no one stops. As she waits, a lost dog, stray cat, and turtle join her. One by one, each animal is claimed by a passerby, and the girl finds herself alone in the box once again. Finally, at day’s end, a loving family stops by “looking for a sister for our little potato.” Ito’s choice of a first-person voice—“maybe I don’t look special enough just sitting here”—lets readers experience the fluctuations in the main character’s emotions as she first rejects and then feels rejected by possible families. In the satisfying conclusion, she chooses her own family, giving her a much-needed sense of control. Uncluttered pages with just a few sentences on each feature spare cartoon-style black-line drawings with red accents. The self-declared “cute-kid” sports a black-and-white pleated skirt, short black hair topped with a red bow, and lollipop red cheeks. The chapter-book trim size should appeal to young readers looking to tackle a longer book; they will be rewarded by getting to know this can-do narrator.

From the September/October 2022 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

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