Other kids can be so mean.
In your classroom, they call you names and whisper bad things. On the playground, they tease you, and it hurts your feelings. You wish you had more friends, and that things were different. But in the new book โSulweโ by Lupita Nyongโo, illustrated by Vashti Harrison, life can change, and it starts on the inside of you.
For a long time, Sulwe hated her skin.
It was dark as midnight and because of it, she didnโt look like anyone else in her family. Her motherโs skin was as bright as the day. Sulweโs father was like sundown, and her sister was like โhigh noon.โ Almost nobody at school was dark-skinned like Sulwe, either, and they called her names for it.
Sulweโs sister had all kinds of friends. Sulwe had almost no friends, and it wasnโt fair.
Maybe, she thought, she could scrub the dark away but ouch! That didnโt work.
Maybe Mamaโs makeup would help make her skin lighter but it just made a mess.
She tried to eat bananas, white bread and other light foods but that just made her full.
Praying didnโt work, either, and when Mama saw that Sulwe was sad, she tried to help. Mama reminded Sulwe that her name means โStarโ and that a starโs brightness comes from the inside. Beauty comes from inside, too, and โit begins with how you see yourselfโฆโ
All that day, Sulwe thought about what Mama said. Could it be that there was light inside her darkness? Was there beauty in skin like midnight? She thought and she thought, and she fell asleep thinking about Mamaโs words.
Not long after Sulweโs eyes closed, they opened again! There in the middle of her room was a shooting star, inviting her on a journey where dark and light were sisters and the people learned that everything was wrong if they didnโt have both.
Was that a lesson Sulwe could use?
Definitely, yes. And if your child has started to notice skin tones, this is a book she can use, too. โSulweโ tells a wonderful tale of differences and loving the skin youโre in.
You arenโt going to see that, though, until later. No, much like the story itself, the first thing youโll see is the outside of โSulwe,โ and itโs absolutely beautiful. Indeed, the illustrations by Vashti Harrison almost glow, and you may have a hard time keeping your hands off.
Go ahead, though, and open the book. There, author Lupita Nyongโo tells a childโs tale that, she says in her end-of-book author note, is somewhat autobiographical: like her character, she was teased for being โnight-shaded.โ Nyongโo goes on to offer advice to children who wish to be lighter-skinned, or who are bullied for being who they are. Not only is this comforting, but it could serve as a great conversation-starter.
Give this book to your child, read it aloud, and enjoy the gorgeous artwork, too. โSulweโ is a book youโll both love, as a beautiful story loaded with meaning.

