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Jenny Mei Is Sad

Hardback

Main Details

Title Jenny Mei Is Sad
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Tracy Subisak
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:40
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 236
ISBN/Barcode 9780316537711
ClassificationsDewey:813.6
Audience
Children / Juvenile

Publishing Details

Publisher Little, Brown & Company
Imprint Little, Brown Young Readers
Publication Date 15 June 2021
Publication Country United States

Description

My friend Jenny Mei is sad. But you might not be able to tell. Jenny Mei still smiles a lot. She makes everyone laugh. And she still likes blue Popsicles the best. But, her friend knows that Jenny Mei is sad, and does her best to be there to support her. Deftly illustrated with a light but sensitive touch, Jenny Mei Is Sad is the perfect picture book to introduce kids to the complexity of sadness, and to show them that the best way to be a good friend, especially to someone sad, is by being there for the fun, the not-fun, and everything in between.

Author Biography

There was a time when Tracy Subisak was very, very sad. Tracy's friends helped her through this time by going on walks with her, eating favorite foods together, and giving her big hugs often. She is the illustrator of several picture books, including the award-winning Shawn Loves Sharks by Curtis Manley and the nonfiction picture book Wood, Wire, Wings: Emma Lilian Todd Invents an Airplane by Kirsten Larson. Tracy is from Ohio and now lives in the Pacific Northwest. To learn more about Tracy, you can visit her website, tracysubisak.com and her Instagram, @tracysubisak.

Reviews

"Subisak sweetly shows, in word and art, how friends are supposed to stick together, even during the not-so-fun times."--Booklist "A complex book with a beautiful, timely message."--Book Riot "A sensitive, gracefully wrought portrait of compassion."--Publishers Weekly "Intelligently and sympathetically demonstrates that children have complex emotional lives too."--Kirkus "A child's consciousness of impending loss hums beneath the surface of Tracy Subisak's gentle picture book "Jenny Mei Is Sad."...In the colorful illustrations, we see Jenny Mei in school, smiling and playing the clown and then suddenly, inexplicably, tearing up a classmate's drawing. Those who are sad, Ms. Subisak shows with kindness, don't always behave as we imagine they should. Sad people may lash out in their misery and, indeed, feel swept away by loneliness and sorrow.--The Wall Street Journal "Subisak's illustrations, rendered in India ink, Japanese watercolor, pastel, and colored pencil, are bold in color yet delicate in detail. The text is simple yet thoughtful, painting our narrator as the empathetic friend she is."--Horn Book