![]() ![]() Yet the warmth of familial bonds emanates from each spread. ![]() Readers may be disappointed not to witness Steven creating his project the hero's artistic, labor-intensive expression of love is the heart of this book. ![]() The characters' facial features, drawn in colored pencil on cut-out shapes, at times appear inconsistent, yet they match the casual assemblages of paper and photo scraps. Steven lives with his grandparents, and their house bustles with extended family. When he cannot find a suitable present at a drugstore or a Jamaican culture shop on Nostrand Avenue, a secondhand toy train inspires him: "The paint was peeling off and some of the windows were broken, but I could see it had potential." Like the snapshots Steven glues onto the toy locomotive's windows to transform it into "The Jones Family Express," the elements of Steptoe's ( In Daddy's Arms I Am Tall) artwork combine into layered compositions: his rough-hewn collages of an African-American family appear against a background of scattered postcards with exotic stamps and jokey cursive messages. ![]() The books setting is Brooklyn, New York, where. "She was so tickled, she promised to send me a postcard from every place she went until I was old enough to travel with her." Aunt Carolyn has kept her word, and Steven wants to thank her with a truly original gift. The illustrator/author, Javaka Steptoe, says of this book that it is a collage of different parts of my life. "Once, when I was three, I hid in her suitcase so she would take me with her," the middle-school boy explains. In this down-to-earth Brooklyn tale, young Steven awaits a visit from his world-traveling Aunt Carolyn. ![]()
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