Review of Beti and the Little Round House

Beti and the Little Round House Beti and the Little Round House
by Atinuke; illus. by Emily Hughes
Primary    Candlewick    128 pp.
10/24    9781536225181    $18.99

Fans of Atinuke’s beloved chapter-book series know that Anna Hibiscus “lives in Africa. Amazing Africa” and Too-Small Tola “lives in Lagos, unbelievable Lagos.” Now we meet protagonist Beti, who lives with her mother, father, and baby brother in a “little round house in the green woods under the mountains,” with no running water or cellphones but with friendly farm animals and close friends and good neighbors nearby. In four brief sections, each set during a different season, readers follow this lively child’s small-scale adventures. The book opens in spring, on Beti’s birthday, with party preparations, including helping Mam bake a cake and then foraging for flowers to decorate it (“and pick some salad too!” says her father). She refuses to wear a party dress; her friends arrive; her birthday gift is…unexpected, as is her reaction to it. Beti is a classic Atinuke protagonist, with her age-appropriate highs and lows; her individuality and three-dimensionality; her moods, mischief, and creative problem-solving. The setting is painted through homey, specific details in the text and in Hughes’s (illustrator of the Charlie & Mouse early readers, among others) frequent spry, eye-pleasing illustrations, a mix of black-and-white and color, spot art and full-bleed section openers. Atinuke’s introductory note describes living in Wales in “a roundhouse built of straw and clay in the woods. It was a life of magic, and of mud,” both on display in this engaging and memorable chapter book.

From the ">November/December 2024 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Elissa Gershowitz

Elissa Gershowitz is editor in chief of The Horn Book, Inc. She holds an MA from the Center for the Study of Children's Literature at Simmons University and a BA from Oberlin College.

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