School Library Journal Review
PreS-K--A mother prepares a child for her next phase in life in this gentle picture book about starting preschool. Pearl is used to school--ballet school that is. Her mother teaches dance and Pearl is the youngest and smallest there (apart from Violet, her ballerina mouse). When her mother proposes preschool with children her own age, Pearl is tentative and curious. Mom supplies the answers to Pearl's questions throughout the course of their day: returning to their apartment via subway, drawing and reading, attending a ballet performance, and getting ready for bed. The next morning, Violet and Pearl decide they are ready for school. The story's focus is not on worry or apprehension regarding school, rather the exploration and processing of what it means to try something new. The mother does not push the issue, and lets Pearl guide the conversation as they draw comparisons between ballet and the activities at preschool. Pearl narrates; her three-year-old's voice is precocious and sweet. The illustrations are just as gentle as the story; though rendered digitally, they look like well-executed watercolors. Mom is chic and stylish, and Pearl is adorable with a mop of short curly black hair. Both are white, while the scenes at both schools and the ballet performance show a diverse cast. The illustrations are active as they portray the city life of this two-person family. VERDICT A recommended purchase for back-to-school collections.--Clara Hendricks, Cambridge P.L., MA
Publisher's Weekly Review
In this winsome, taut story, a timid child warms to the idea of preschool with her mother's tactical nudging and her own ingenuity. Cherubic Pearl is the smallest dancer at her mother's ballet school--except for Violet, her stuffed mouse, which she clutches while practicing at a barre she can't quite reach. "Violet and I already go to school," Pearl counters when her mom mentions preschool. But after learning that she'll have a chance to paint a sugar plum fairy and listen to such stories as The Nutcracker, Pearl shifts her stance, announcing that Violet wants to attend preschool after all. It's a wise decision on the mouse's part, and both have a fine time during a day that's fetchingly chronicled in pictures rendered digitally by Fortenberry with lithe lines, soothing hues, and subtle yet effective emotion. This charming antidote to preschool anxiety contains a deftly measured dose of sweetness. Ages 2--5. (July)