Bound To Stay Bound

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 What happened to you? (What Happened To You?)
 Author: Catchpole, James

 Publisher:  Little, Brown (2023)

 Classification: Easy
 Physical Description: [32] p., col. ill., 26 x 26 cm

 BTSB No: 199012 ISBN: 9780316506472
 Ages: 4-8 Grades: K-3

 Subjects:
 People with disabilities -- Fiction
 Playgrounds -- Fiction

Price: $23.28

Summary:
A boy named Joe is trying to play pirates at the playground, but he keeps being asked what happened to his leg. Bombarded with questions and silly suggestions, Joe becomes more and more fed up ... until the kids finally understand they don't need to know what happened.

 Illustrator: George, Karen
Accelerated Reader Information:
   Interest Level: LG
   Reading Level: 2.00
   Points: .5   Quiz: 521336

Reviews:
   School Library Journal (05/05/23)
   Booklist (04/15/23)
 The Hornbook (+) (00/09/23)

Full Text Reviews:

Booklist - 04/15/2023 Joe is playing in a park when a child approaches with a question. Joe has one leg, so people are always curious about the missing one. Basing the story on his own experiences, the author addresses both sides of the query with humor and empathy. When children first gather around Joe, he refers to them as Kid One, Kid Two, etc. They pitch a variety of explanations, most of which Joe considers silly. Did the leg fall off? Did it fall into a toilet? Did a lion bite him? While humorous gouache and colored-pencil illustrations of imagined scenarios keep the tone light, the message comes through clearly: Joe would rather get to know the children as people, and have them know him rather than define himself by his disability. As Joe meets Simone, Yuto, Caspar, Mainie, and Ibrahim, the fact that they all are much more alike than different is deftly communicated. A helpful note to adults about how to help small children talk to people with disabilities is included. - Copyright 2023 Booklist.

School Library Journal - 05/05/2023 PreS-Gr 3—George's cover illustration tells readers nothing and everything in Catchpole's exuberant book about abilities and how to talk about them. Two smiling children each stand on simple wooden swings, boards attached with ropes; she is Black with two puffs of dark hair, and he is white with flyaway blond hair. She has two legs, he has one. Within the pages, readers learn he is Joe, and he is a pirate, dealing with a shark. Kid One, the girl with the puffs, wants to know what has happened to Joe's leg. Other children join in with questions about where his leg went, ruining Joe's pirate quest as well as his day. He deflects all questions, becoming moody and even angry, until Simone, who was "Kid One," asks, "Is that a crocodile down there?" and Joe lets her in. Soon all the kids have names and roles in Joe's game and the question of his leg is forgotten. Most of the story unfolds in conversation; the brevity of narrative moves the action along and George's cheerful illustrations capture in monotones pictures of the potential absurd answers to the children's impulsive questions. Catchpole, shown in a family photograph with one leg and a prosthetic, includes an author's note to explain how any person with a physical difference may not want to be interrupted (or become a so-called teachable moment) for questions about that difference, and ways to address such matters openly. VERDICT A rare perspective that removes pity, dissolves differences or impediments, and welcomes everyone into the game unquestioningly.—Kimberly Olson Fakih - Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

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