![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/63b612993363e32917d1f542bfb9eee1a243c82fd7fbf5d43d6ab63739df28da/AkidisaKid.jpg)
August 2021 - Groundwood Books
Written by Sara O’Leary Illustrated by Qin Leng
In this companion to the enormously popular A Family Is a Family Is a Family, a group of kids share the silly questions they always hear, as well as the questions they would rather be asked about themselves.
Being the new kid is hard, a child in the school playground tells us. I can think of better things to ask than if I’m a boy or a girl. Another child comes along and says she gets asked why she always has her nose in a book. Someone else gets asked where they come from.
One after another, children share the questions they’re tired of being asked again and again — as opposed to what they believe are the most important or interesting things about themselves. As they move around the playground, picking up new friends along the way, there is a feeling of understanding and acceptance among them. And in the end, the new kid comes up with the question they would definitely all like to hear: “Hey kid, want to play?”
Sara O’Leary’s thoughtful text and Qin Leng’s expressive illustrations tell a story about children who are all different, all themselves, all just kids.
Written by Sara O’Leary Illustrated by Qin Leng
In this companion to the enormously popular A Family Is a Family Is a Family, a group of kids share the silly questions they always hear, as well as the questions they would rather be asked about themselves.
Being the new kid is hard, a child in the school playground tells us. I can think of better things to ask than if I’m a boy or a girl. Another child comes along and says she gets asked why she always has her nose in a book. Someone else gets asked where they come from.
One after another, children share the questions they’re tired of being asked again and again — as opposed to what they believe are the most important or interesting things about themselves. As they move around the playground, picking up new friends along the way, there is a feeling of understanding and acceptance among them. And in the end, the new kid comes up with the question they would definitely all like to hear: “Hey kid, want to play?”
Sara O’Leary’s thoughtful text and Qin Leng’s expressive illustrations tell a story about children who are all different, all themselves, all just kids.
![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/7cec677fc2741ba2aa55efb754db0d92ef93143817c478cee5e3372b4bde6735/AkidisaKid000.jpg)
![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/f805354fb7fdbd255d3d3c97a267b805a9ba04f703b1566d573682dafebad4f3/AkidisaKid002.jpg)