Book Reviewed: Islandborn – Junot Díaz and Leo Espinosa, Dial Books for Young Readers, 2018
April is National Poetry Month, with lots of opportunities for engagement with young readers. Therefore, I’m going to to take a different approach to a new book that is getting a lot of publicity, but not in this vein.

For, Islandborn is not a poetry book…but it is a book filled with poetry. Junot Díaz and Leo Espinosa have created an exquisite tribute to the power of the past, even when that past is narrated to a child too young to remember. Lola, a little girl of Dominican heritage living in a close-knit community in Washington Heights, New York City, is assigned a project by her teacher, Ms. Obi. When the kids in her ethnically diverse class area asked to draw a picture of the country from which they emigrated, Lola is anxious. “Miss,” she asks, anticipating a problem, “what if you don’t remember where you are from? What if you left before you could start remembering?” Ms. Obi inquires if Lola knows people who do remember. Lola’s response, “Like my whole neighborhood!” produces a child’s journey through her heritage, and makes her into an artist and a poet.





Here are some challenges to male authority to share with our children. The women included are all profiled in 
