Review of Kente for Jojo

Kente for Jojo  Kente for Jojo
by Bernard Mensah; illus. by Elizabeth Zunon
Primary    Knopf    32 pp.
6/25    9780593567128    $18.99
Library ed.  9780593567135    $21.99

In a familial tradition of selecting Kente for children, a young narrator and family travel to pick one for the protagonist’s baby brother, Jojo. Along the way, Daddy entertains the family with the familiar story of how Kente began through the folklore of Ananse the spider. Mensah’s poetic text imbues the older sibling’s process of looking for Jojo’s Kente with love for both Jojo and the tradition, as they first admire the Kente on the wall of a shop (“This is the home of Kente, where the first were made for kings”) and then approach a weaver to create a new one: “something special. Something beautiful. Something…that sparkles and shines, just like Jojo.” The narrator himself is inspired by the rainbow to try to weave Nyankonton, “the story of God’s eyebrows.” Holding up the finished work (including a mistake, which makes it “even more special”), the weaver says, “Nyankonton means he will be beautiful, unique, and have great luck.” Mensah’s vivid storytelling is as inviting as Zunon’s colorful illustrations, which were made using acrylic and oil paint and cut-paper collage and intricately convey the rich texture of the cloth and the meticulous weaving process. Together, they have created a fascinating introduction to this reverent aspect of Ghanaian culture. Back matter provides additional information about Kente, including its history, colors, and patterns.

From the September/October 2025 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Pauletta Brown Bracy
Pauletta Brown Bracy is professor of library science at North Carolina Central University. She is chair of the 2015-2017 Coretta Scott King Book Awards committee and serves on the 2017 Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards committee.

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