Review of Snow Angel, Sand Angel

Snow Angel, Sand Angel Snow Angel, Sand Angel
by Lois-Ann Yamanaka; illus. by Ashley Lukashevsky
Primary    Make Me a World/Random    40 pp.    g
1/22    978-0-593-12737-7    $17.99
Library ed.  978-0-593-12738-4    $20.99
e-book ed.  978-0-593-12739-1    $10.99

Claire, who lives with her family in Hawai’i, yearns to experience snow. Her family visits Mauna Kea, but the snow there isn’t the kind she’s seen in movies— she wants soft snow, not icy. She also wants real mittens (not socks), a real scarf (not an old beach towel), a real snowman (not the sad-looking lump they build), and a real sled (not the “sugarcane truck inner tube” that bumps over the hard snow). But her discontent dissipates after a day at nearby Hapuna Beach, where her family builds a sandman, using shells for eyes, driftwood for a pipe, and coral for a smile. Claire floats happily in the waves (in the inner tube), and then everyone makes sand angels. Claire now realizes she lives on a “beautiful island of lava fields, sandy beaches, rain forests, fiery volcanoes, sacred mountains, and, yes, even snow.” This “grass is always greener” story will fascinate kids accustomed to snow every winter and will remind kids in warmer climates of the beauty to be found in their own surroundings. Yamanaka and Lukashevsky both convey their love of their home state; the lyrically written narrative contains Hawaiian words (glossary/pronunciation guide included), and the digital illustrations glow with vibrant colors, the multi-hued ocean imagery far outshining Claire’s imaginary pink and purple snow scenes.

From the March/April 2022 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Jennifer M. Brabander

Jennifer M. Brabander is former senior editor of The Horn Book Magazine. She holds an MA from the Center for the Study of Children’s Literature from Simmons University.

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