cover image I Am a Masterpiece! An Empowering Story About Inclusivity and Growing Up with Down Syndrome

I Am a Masterpiece! An Empowering Story About Inclusivity and Growing Up with Down Syndrome

Mia Armstrong, illus. by Alexandra Thompson. Random House, $19.99 (40p) ISBN 978-0-593-56797-5

Opening lines establish Armstrong’s direct tone in this affirming autobiographical debut: “I have Down syndrome, and I like myself exactly as I am. I just want people to be nice to me and to like me for who I am, too.” Noting that “sometimes people forget their manners,” the speaker details a challenging episode at a shoe store, where “grown-ups act like I’m invisible.” At school, the protagonist and classmates, depicted with varying abilities and skin tones, draw self-portraits. When Mia’s, a portrait of “how I feel, not how I look” as well as “how I see the world,” proves different from the others, she proudly asserts, “I think that makes it the best of all,” modeling a confidence later supported by her family’s praise. Appearing frequently as multiple vignettes on a page, Thompson’s delicate pencil and gouache renderings amplify the emotion that infuses the text’s vision of external patience and self-love. An author’s note opens, and a q&a about Down syndrome concludes. Ages 4–8. (Jan.)