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by Aanyah Abdullah & Shaila Abdullah
Loving Healing Press 1/1/2014
978-1-61599-211-9
Age 6 to 8 30 pages
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“A simple tale of love and friendship to warm your heart. This is the tale of a little girl who forms a close bond with a child with cerebral palsy. The girl finds that through her art, she can reach her special friend Suhana.”
Opening
“My friend Suhana is like no other girl I know.”
The Story
Suhana has Cerebral Palsy or CP for short. She is a quiet girl who moves little and depends upon others for all her needs. Despite all her limitations, Suhana can communicate. It takes someone special to understand all of Suhana and her needs. The narrator, an unnamed little girl, is trying to be that someone special for Suhana. The young girl, a budding artist, tries to use her art with Suhana. She uses different colors to symbolize Suhana’s various moods. Red equates being upset, blue is calm and pink is love. The young girl rocks Suhana in her arms and shows her the pictures she draws. Both girls are seven-years-old, which is not lost on the young girl.
Review
My Friend Suhana is a sweet homage to a young girl with cerebral palsy from a young girl who tries to be her friend. As narrator, the young girl tells us about Suhana and their relationship. The young narrator displays a great deal of empathy for Suhana, a girl her own age. Suhana’s mother tries to help the young girl understand her daughter. The young narrator volunteers with Suhana each week–
“But for one hour each week I get a chance to rock her in my arms and imagine that she is my special friend!”
What the young girl fails to realize is that she needs not imagine. Suhana is her special friend and she is Suhana’s special friend. Volunteering at the special needs class, the young narrator begins to understand Suhana through her own art, probably more than Suhana understands what the young artist is trying to say. The young volunteer does not say if she has helped Suhana make her own art, but that would be a great step to take.
As a story, My Friend Suhana falls quite short. The protagonist is the young narrator, telling her own story, but there is no antagonist, unless you consider CP. A teacher tells the narrator that her art can help ease anxiety in others, so the girl starts giving her art to her friends. What changes does this make? Do these kids find relief and does this help the protagonist grow? The narrator is seven-years-old, as was the author when she co-authored this book. She relates her experiences well, but for what reason. What is the story? Where is the conflict that will change her? Who is the protagonist?
Rather than go into craft, conflicts, and all that stuff the young writer may not grasp, but a story needs, I would rather say this is a fine attempt for a first book. Putting oneself out there with kids who are so extremely different from yourself is difficult. Then telling the world about it, trying to relate what a great kid Suhana is, turns a hill into a mountain and this young author climbs that mountain gracefully and with much empathy. Aanyah is a great kid.
She realistically explains Suhana’s reactions to things she does not like, “she clenches her fists,” and when happy, “she waves her legs and arms wildly.” When Suhana bumps her head she, “screams unhappily . . . tired from crying, she fell asleep.” For seven years of age, this young girl is extremely observant and insightful. Everything the young narrator mentions about Suhana, I have seen repeated many times by kids with CP I have worked with. It takes a special individual with great empathy and patience to help these kids, even more to be a friend. Which is why I would rather exult the young author’s ability to work with others, her empathy, her patience, and her art, which she uses to help others.
My Friend Suhana is not a story. It is a loving tribute to a special friend and as such can be very helpful for other kids to read. Mainstreamed schools are a great place for this work to be available. Volunteer centers that allow kids to help, is another. Obviously, places with cerebral palsy patients are great places for this work, but any place with young children as clients that allows children to volunteer can benefit from having the volunteers read this young writer’s first work. My Friend Suhana may not be a “story,” but it has a lot of heart.
MY FRIEND SUHANA. Text copyright © 2014 by Aanyah & Shaia Abdullah. Illustrations copyright © 2014 by Shaila Abdullah. Reproduced by permission of the publisher, Loving Healing Press, Ann Arbor, MI.
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Learn more about My Friend Suhana HERE.
Buy My Friend Suhana at Amazon—B&N—Loving Healing Press—your local bookstore.
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Meet the author, Aanyah Abdullah at her website: http://myfriendsuhana.com/
Meet author, Shaila Abdullah at their website: http://www.shailaabdullah.com/
Find other interesting books at the Loving Healing Press website: http://www.lovinghealing.com/
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Pingback: Perfect Picture Book Friday! My Friend Suhana: A Story of Friendship and Cerebral Palsy | This Kid Reviews Books
Beat me again! >:/ I really like this book. I think it could help kids understand CP a bit more. Good review – I’ll link to it! 😀
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“You better link to this, buster!” Just kidding. Thanks for the link. I agree, kids might understand CP just a little bit more, or for the first time, after reading this story. Can’t wait for your thoughts. Will link to them too. Never know when someone will read a review. 🙂
almost forgot – you are going to have to pass that trophy this way haha!
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Reblogged this on Women of wisdom A personal journey.
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Aren’t rules meant to be broken? I love the illustrations in this book and that it’s a tribute to a special friend!
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Wow, you are so right rules are meant to be broken. Where were you when I was writing this review? Out playing with your barnyard friends? Or Little Bigfoot? I forgot that,shame on me. I was thinking tribute ❤ to a friend. But you are very right.
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Wow, Sue, just reading the story summary, I got all choked up. The illustrations are beautiful to look at–really well done 🙂 And it sounds like more of a memoir than a story, which may have been the intent? I love the subject matter.
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I think Aanyah would choke anyone up listening to her story, her experiences. This is a kid that will shine her entire life.
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My kind of story. Love the story and illustrations!
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Thanks for commenting. I’m glad you like the book. 🙂
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The concept of this book is excellent. The protagonist (and author) did a great job of observing, helping, and growing from the experience of helping someone else better their life. I think in time, with an understanding of “writing rules”, this will be a very successful book.
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I Agree, but at ten-years-old, and some hep from mom, this is pretty good. Definitely shines a light onto Cerebral Palsy.
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