Review of My Hands Tell a Story

My Hands Tell a Story My Hands Tell a Story
by Kelly Starling Lyons; illus. by Tonya Engel
Primary    Reycraft    32 pp.    g
5/22    978-1-4788-7061-6    $17.95

Zoe loves baking cinnamon-swirl bread with her grandmother. As Grandma kneads the dough with a “push and pull,” she recalls how her own mother taught her to make bread. When Zoe tries kneading, however, the dough bunches up and sticks to her hands; Zoe wonders “if they will ever move” like her grandmother’s. Standing behind her, Grandma places her hands on top of Zoe’s and guides the kneading “until it’s just right.” Engel’s (Your Legacy, rev. 1/22) highly textured illustrations, with deep, rich colors, capture the closeness of the intergenerational bond described by Lyons (Dream Builder, rev. 3/20). While the dough rises, grandmother and granddaughter “sit and talk. [Grandma’s] hands tell a story if you listen.” The following double-page spread shows Grandma’s lined palms and fingers up-close, labeled with different identities, including “teacher,” “planter,” and, most prominently, “mother.” As Grandma talks about her own life, Zoe wonders where her own hands will go and what stories they will tell. Baking and reminiscing with Grandma help Zoe see the power and potential she holds in her own hands. A fine companion to Bingham’s Soul Food Sunday (rev. 11/21), this story spreads joy like a dusting of flour on a freshly baked loaf.

From the May/June 2022 issue of The Horn Book Magazine.

Dr. Michelle H. Martin
Michelle H. Martin
Dr. Michelle H. Martin is the Beverly Cleary Professor for Children & Youth Services in the Information School at the University of Washington in Seattle.

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