cover image The Fairest in the Land

The Fairest in the Land

Lesléa Newman, illus. by Joshua Heinsz. Abrams, $17.99 (40p) ISBN 978-1-4197-5709-9

A game of dress-up underlines the importance of personal expression in this picture book from Newman and Heinsz. When young Annabelle, portrayed with brown skin, suggests dressing up to white-cued friend Benjamin, Annabelle asks, “Who would you like to be?” He chooses to dress up as a bride, wearing “silk ribbons in my hair/ to match my lacy dress.” “Okay,” Annabelle says, donning a lavender top hat and tails to walk him down the aisle. As Benjamin next dresses as a ballerina and a princess, Annabelle accompanies by taking on traditional male roles—and growing increasingly gloomy along the way. When Benjamin suggests that they both be princesses, the idea allows them each to enjoy the game, and dance the night away alongside friends shown with varied body types and skin tones. Newman’s rhyming quatrains and Heinsz’s animation-style illustrations, which lean into candy-bright pinks and purples, offer a portrait of communication and safe-space-making that affirms gender expression across the spectrum. Ages 4–8. (May)