Pltanos Are Love
By (Author) Alyssa Reynoso-Morris
Illustrated by Mariyah Rahman
Simon & Schuster
Atheneum Books for Young Readers
7th June 2023
United States
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Cooking and food
Childrens / Teenage general interest: Places and peoples
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Families and family members
Hardback
40
Width 254mm, Height 254mm, Spine 13mm
451g
A delicious picture book about the ways plantains shape Latinx culture, community, and family, told through a young girls experiences in the kitchen with her abuela.
Abuela says, pltanos are love.
I thought they were food.
But Abuela says they feed us in more ways than one.
With every pop of the tostones, mash of the mang, and sizzle of the maduros, a little girl learns that pltanos are her history, they are her culture, andmost importantlythey are love.
"Cooking plantains with Abuela, young Esme grows to appreciate her family lineage in this intergenerationally focused first-person tale . . . Rahmans digital illustrations use bright, warm colors for contemporary spreads and desaturated greens and browns to delineate scenes occurring in the past, contributing to a thoughtful story of legacy." -- Publishers Weekly
"Text that incorporates unitalicized Spanish throughout and warm and inviting illustrations convey affection for both food and family and will leave readers hungry for pltanos.A cozy story for the stomach and the soul." -- Kirkus Reviews
Alyssa Reynoso-Morris is a queer Afro-Latinx Dominican and Puerto Rican writer, wife, mother, and community organizer. During the day she is a chief of staff working with community members, nonprofit organizations, and government officials to make the world a better place. Then she puts her writers hat on to craft heartfelt stories about home, family, food, and the fun places she has been. Alyssa was born and raised in the Bronx and currently lives in Philadelphia with her partner and daughter. Alyssa is honored to be a Musa with Las Musas Books which celebrates the diversity of voice, experience, and power of Latinx childrens authors. She hopes you enjoy her stories.
Mariyah Rahman was born and raised in Trinidad and Tobago. She spent her earliest years climbing trees, digging for fossils, and drawing on walls with crayons. Today she is an illustrator for childrens books and entertainment but has still never found a fossil.