We Belong Together: A Book About Adoption and Families by Todd Parr

32 p., Little, Brown, 2007. There are so many reasons that families belong together. This story names some of them, from “you needed a home and I had one to share,” to “you needed someone to say ‘I love you’ and we had love to give.” The only time the word adoption is mentioned is in the subtitle. An author’s note suggests that families change the pronouns in the text to fit their own families, and the pictures suggest single-mom, single-dad, mom-and-dad, two-mom, and two-dad families that are yellow, blue, orange, green, red, or purple. An afterword for kids explains that love makes a family. With its energetic, childlike illustrations, this book conveys a positive sense of families fitting together perfectly. Ages 2-6
Share:

No comments:

Post a Comment

Featured post

The Five Stages of Interviewing Offshore Software Engineers

The following describes a few techniques that I use when interviewing applicants for Software Engineering positions in offshore locations. I...

Tags

ADHD (5) adoption (8) African (3) African American (10) AIDS (1) Alzheimer's disease (1) anger (1) apology (1) art (2) Asian (1) Asian American (3) asthma (1) autism (1) baby (5) bad day (1) bedtime (4) being little (3) blended family (2) bully (4) cat (2) cerebral palsy (2) change (1) chronic illness (1) competition (2) crying (1) dance (1) deafness (2) death of a person (9) death of a pet (1) dementia (2) developmental disability (1) disability (7) disability of another (1) disaster (5) divorce (1) doctor (2) dog (3) earthquake (2) embarrassment (2) ethnicity (1) European (7) European American (58) families (2) fear (7) feelings (2) first grade (1) friend moves away (2) friendship (21) fussy eater (2) gender (4) getting lost (1) grandfather (7) grandmother (7) guilt (1) homework (1) hugs (2) hurricane (3) imagination (11) immigration (3) Indian American (1) inflexibility (1) interview (1) kindergarten (1) Korean American (1) Latino (8) losing a tooth (1) lying (1) medication (2) Mexican American (1) military family (2) minor illness (2) monsters (2) mother (2) moving house (3) multicultural (54) music (1) non-human (45) oppositionality (1) organization (2) perfectionism (2) persistence (2) potty learning (1) prejudice (11) preschool (1) reading (1) resilient sense of self (10) same-sex parents (4) schoolwork (1) security in relationship (7) separation (7) serious illness of another person (7) shyness (2) sibling (1) sibling relationships (2) slavery (1) Spanish (1) speech (1) starting school (3) stuttering (1) teasing (2) test anxiety (1) therapy (4) vegetables (1) war (2) worry (4) yoga (1)