cover image Father's Day Blues: What Do You Do about Father's Day When All You Have Are Mothers?

Father's Day Blues: What Do You Do about Father's Day When All You Have Are Mothers?

Irene Smalls-Hector. Longmeadow Press, $11 (1pp) ISBN 978-0-681-00543-3

When Cheryl Blues has to write a Father's Day composition entitled ``My Daddy,'' she realizes she has a problem: ``I wanted to ask the teacher what to do if you don't have a daddy.'' Readers are in for some confusion of their own in this circuitous tale, however, as Cheryl reverses herself in the very next paragraph: ``I do have a daddy. He just doesn't live with me.'' The African American girl's household includes her mother, grandmother, aunt and the aunt's baby boy, while the absence of Cheryl's father is never explained (Are her parents divorced or separated? Has the father died?). Mother convinces her daughter that she is surrounded by love, and that ``Your daddy's not being around isn't your fault.'' Smalls (Irene and the Big Fat Nickel) points up the importance of familial love whatever its source. Unfortunately, while her narrative provides several jumping-off points for adult-child dialogue, it is somewhat muddled and ponderous. McGovern's muted, full-page illustrations--primarily character studies--are for the most part comfortingly true-to-life, but the concluding picture, with Daddy's face smiling down from the clouds, adds an unnecessary dose of melodrama. Ages 5-8. (June)