Picture Book Review: The First Day by Phùng Nguyên Quang & Huynh Kim Liên

One of my goals for 2021 is to post more book reviews of the treasures I find at Annie Blooms Books where I work part time. I’m going to try to post a short review every week. These may be reviews that have been posted at the bookstore or on The Mixed Up Files of MG Authors where I have a regular column.

My inaugural review is for my favorite picture book of 2021 so far. It would be my pick for the next Caldecott winner but since it’s a translated book from Vietnam it’s not eligible for the top American picture book prize. Having lived overseas, I have special spot in my heart for translated work. And because many of our school children this month are having their first day of school outside their homes, The First Day seems particularly relevant. What better way to celebrate this milestone than reading this book about the first day of school. Our hero sets out alone early in the morning in a boat on “the great river, the Mother Mekong.” The paintings are luminous, and convey the child’s pride in being big enough to make this journey, his nervousness about the creatures watching from the mangrove forest, and his wonder at the beauty of the birds and fish around him. Best of all (and I’m sure this will resonate deeply with children) he is delighted to see his friends, the other boys and girls who have paddled to school. The text of the story is gorgeous too, spare but rich in metaphor. This book is sheer joy.