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Book Review: Families Are Different

My last blog reviewed two books on families which showcase the diversity of families in gorgeous photographs of families, both doing everyday things and celebrating special events.

Families Are Different was written and illustrated by Nina Pelligrini, a mother of two adopted daughters who said this book was inspired by feelings expressed by one of her daughters.

The book’s characters are two daughters from Korea and their two white parents. With its simply-drawn illustrations and its matter-of-fact narration by one of children, the book is well-suited to younger children but makes a point that will be appreciated by older children as well.

The book talks about the child doing ordinary, everyday things, including spending affectionate time with her parents and sister and attending kindergarten with her two best friends.

One daughter feels her family is “different” because her friends look like their parents, and she often hears people say to other moms, “Your child looks so much like you!”

She talks to her mom, who tell her that there are different kinds of families, but they are all held together by “a special kind of glue called love”.

The girl begins looking around her, and notices that: one boy in her class looks like his African-American father but not like his Euro-American mother, one boy’s family is a mom and a sister but no dad, a family of just a dad and daughter, one girl who lives at two houses because of her parents’ divorce, a boy who lives with his sister and his grandparents, and a girl who lives with her father, stepmother, and younger half-sister.

There is a large family where all members look alike, but also a family whose members all look quite different from one another even though they are a “typical” same-race family of a mom and dad and two kids. There is also a family who has an adopted daughter and a birth son.

Kids may think of their own families as different because of adoption, but never considered the many reasons that many—in fact most—families have something that makes them different from the “typical” family often portrayed in the media.

The point is made in the narrator’s conclusion:

“Now I don’t think I’m strange at all. I’m just like everyone else…I’m different!”

Please see these related blogs:

Seeking Out Diversity

Talking about Diversity

This entry was posted in Adoption Books and tagged , , , by Pam Connell. Bookmark the permalink.

About Pam Connell

Pam Connell is a mother of three by both birth and adoption. She has worked in education, child care, social services, ministry and journalism. She resides near Seattle with her husband Charles and their three children. Pam is currently primarily a Stay-at-Home-Mom to Patrick, age 8, who was born to her; Meg, age 6, and Regina, age 3, who are biological half-sisters adopted from Korea. She also teaches preschoolers twice a week and does some writing. Her activities include volunteer work at school, church, Cub Scouts and a local Birth to Three Early Intervention Program. Her hobbies include reading, writing, travel, camping, walking in the woods, swimming and scrapbooking. Pam is a graduate of Seattle University and Gonzaga University. Her fields of study included journalism, religious education/pastoral ministry, political science and management. She served as a writer and editor of the college weekly newspaper and has been Program Coordinator of a Family Resource Center and Family Literacy Program, Volunteer Coordinator at a church, Religion Teacher, Preschool Teacher, Youth Ministry Coordinator, Camp Counselor and Nanny. Pam is an avid reader and continuing student in the areas of education, child development, adoption and public policy. She is eager to share her experiences as a mother by birth and by international adoption, as a mother of three kids of different learning styles and personalities, as a mother of kids of different races, and most of all as a mom of three wonderful kids!