An ode to the pleasures and
surprises of compound words: “the smallest poem in the English language.”
Erlichman writes short lines of love
and comfort, addressed to an unspecified “you” and laced throughout with
standard or newly fashioned compound words: “A friendship is like that. / With
sails powered by / the deepest of breaths. / Some might call it a loveship… /
or a songship…or a wowship… / and they’d be right. / But even if your ship’s
makeshift, / come beloved, be loved / by me.” In the fanciful, semiabstract art,
human figures—most but not all adult, paper-white with red lips and other
visible features, but drawn in simple, flowing lines as if wearing sheets over
their heads—dance, embrace, wave, or gaze pensively outward. The voice, too, is
adult (or nearly so), addressing an absent “Sweetheart” who evidently wrestles
with depression and loneliness. Though the language occasionally takes a turn
to the twee side (“Don’t be tooscared. Be toocared”), there is an insistent
flow to the sounds and sentiments that will carry readers over the (not very
rough) emotional rapids to a concluding reassurance that “you’ll always belong.”
The trim is 8 ½ inches high by 6 ½ inches wide, so despite its heavily
illustrated nature, it will not look out of place on YA shelves.
Nascent wordsmiths will be left keen
to explore the expressive possibilities for themselves. (Picture book.
12-16)

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