c.2018, Chronicle Books
$17.99 ($24.99 Canada)
48 pages
Oopsy-daisy.
Thatโs what Grandma might say when youโre tumbling around and your head holds your feet up. The world sure looks different when your toes are on top and youโre looking at things from upside down, and in the new book โLibbaโ by Laura Veirs, illustrated by Tatyana Fazlalizadeh, thatโs not the only thing thatโs all out of order.
Music was everywhere, for Libba Cotten.
When she fetched water for her mother and brother, she heard river music. The axe she used to chop wood sang to her. There was a clickety-clack of music in the trains as they sped by on two tracks.
Libba โheard music everywhereโ and she longed to make it herself but her brother didnโt like anyone touching his guitar. Even so, whenever he wasnโt home, Libba went to his room, took up the instrument, and played โ even though she was left-handed, and had to do it upside down and backwards. To anybody else, that would have been weird but to Libba, โit was the way that felt rightโฆโ
Her brother, Claude, hated that Libba borrowed his guitar but โDANG!โ she was good. She could play well, and she even wrote songs. Thatโs how it was, until Claude moved away and took his guitar with him. Libba did chores and saved money until she was able to have a guitar of her own.
And she played. Upside down and backward, until time passed and she stopped.
Years later, when Libba was much older, she met a woman from a โmusical familyโ who hired her to work as a housekeeper at a home that was filled with music! There were โbanjos in the bedrooms, pianos in the parlor, and bass drums in the basement.โ All day and all night, musicians drifted in and out, men with names like Muddy Waters and Woody Guthrie, and Libba started hearing music again.
Then one day, when nobody was paying any attention and nobody would care about how she strummed, Libba borrowed a guitar. And she played music.
Upside down. And backwards.
Before you snuggle up with your child for an inaugural round of โLibba,โ take a few minutes to read the book yourself, so youโre fully prepared for what youโll see.
Oh, that artwork! Through Tatyana Fazlalizadehโs charcoal drawings, musician Elizabeth Cottenโs story is told so exquisitely that it may render you almost speechless. Chances are, your child might not notice but you will. Be prepared.
What your child will find here is a story of keeping a dream alive, even when itโs been shelved for a long time. In telling this tale, Laura Veirsโs words dance like fingers on frets as she lends lightness to the story, despite its Depression-era theme. Be sure to read her Authorโs Note, which explains much more about Cotten and her work.
If yours is a musical family or if your child does things a little different, then this is a story youโll want to read again and again. For you, for sure, โLibbaโ is a book that holds up.

