cover image Wild Blue: Taming a Big-Kid Bike

Wild Blue: Taming a Big-Kid Bike

Dashka Slater, illus. by Laura Hughes. Candlewick, $18.99 (32p) ISBN 978-1-5362-1567-0

Through the extended metaphor of taming a wild stallion, an imaginative child describes learning to ride a new bike in this warmly encouraging story. When Daddy puts Kayla’s little pink bike “out to pasture,” the child, portrayed with tan skin and lasso in hand, is taken to “wrangle a new one from the herd” at the local bike shop, selecting a snazzy blue two-wheeler that’s called Wild Blue. “This bike’s not tame enough to ride!” declares Kayla after being “bucked” from the bicycle. Working with acrylic ink, Hughes leans into the book’s premise, incorporating western references into what seem like otherwise metropolitan scenes: in one spread, a group of cyclists transforms into a pack of horseback-riding kids in western hats; in another, the bike’s shadow is that of a horse. Time spent practicing at a park eventually yields results, and the oneness the child achieves with Wild Blue as they ride off into the sunset—“Her legs are my legs./ Her mane, my mane./ Her breath, my breath”—aptly captures the thrilling triumph of learning to ride. Ages 3–7. (Feb.)