Look Up! is an award-winning picture book that has won hearts everywhere. Illustrator Dapo Adeola – who has also been BookTrust’s Writer-Illustrator in Residence – is here to give some brilliant book suggestions for fans of chatterbox Rocket and her passion for the stars.
Illustration by Dapo Adeola from Look Up!, written by Nathan Bryon
Dapo Adeola
So, I’m often asked to recommend picture books for families who loved my first picture book Look Up!, which I co-authored with Nathan Bryon. Look Up! is about a Black girl, Rocket, who is obsessed with space and really wants to be an astronaut just like her heroine Mae Jemison.
What other books might young fans of Look Up! enjoy?
For women reaching for the stars
Ken Wilson-Max’s Astro Girl
Ken Wilson-Max’s picture book Astro Girl also features a Black girl, Astrid, who is really into space and wants to find out all about it. There are some great non-fiction books for kids out there about Mae Jemison, like Caroline Moss and Sinem Erkas’ Work It, Girl: Blast off Into Space like Mae Jemison. I also like Little Leaders: Bold Women in Black History by Vashti Harrison – it’s a really accessible book for kids about great women like Jemison and Rosa Parks but also includes some notable black British women like Diane Abbott.
Astrid loves the stars and space, and wants to be an astronaut. A delightful and educational book for young readers interested in space travel, with colourful illustrations, large-print text, fun facts, diverse characters and heartfelt father-daughter interactions.
A beautifully written and illustrated book about the inspiring life story of Mae Jemison, the first black woman in space, from the wonderful Work It Girl series.
This beautiful and profound book chronicles the struggles and achievements of historic and contemporary black women. Not just for girls, this is an inspiring book for any child as it shows how determination, ambition and hard work can bring important change.
For brilliant Black girls
Illustration from Ada Twist, Scientist by Andrea Beaty and David Roberts
Nathan and I have made two books featuring Rocket and her family – in the second, Clean Up!, Rocket goes to visit her Grammy and Grampy on an island where her grandparents run an animal sanctuary. While she’s there, a turtle washes up on the beach, tangled in plastic, and Rocket decides to help. She’s a character that really cares about the world around her and her community. Ada Twist, Scientist by Andrea Beaty and David Roberts is another picture book that features a curious little Black girl with a brilliant and inquisitive mind, as she carries out various experiments in pursuit of knowledge.
Rocket loves visiting her Grammy and Grampy in the Caribbean, especially splashing in the waves with her cool surfing Grammy – but when Rocket finds a baby turtle washed up on the shore, tangled in plastic, she decides something must be done. It’s time to clean up!
A brilliant and beautiful rhyming book about supporting your child’s curiosity, and taking inspiration from Ada Lovelace (the pioneer mathematician and programmer), this is an inspirational and entertaining read.
For those who care about the planet
Illustration from the front cover of Loll Kirby and Aledina Lirius’ Old Enough to Save the Planet
I recently saw an amazing non-fiction book by Dr Mya-Rose Craig called We Have a Dream: Meet 30 Young Indigenous People and People of Colour Protecting the Planet, which I’ll be checking out, and Loll Kirby and Aledina Lirius’ Old Enough to Save the Planet is another one that features young people across the world making meaningful changes in their communities – just like Rocket.
Telling the stories of twelve young activists inspiring change in their communities and around the world, this is a book to treasure and so too are the young people whose stories it contains. Celebrating young activists, in style, it will inform and inspire many more.
For modern Black families
Illustration from Hannah Lee and Allen Fatimaharan’s The Rapping Princess
I’m also stoked to have a picture book out right now with the legend that is Malorie Blackman – We’re Going to Find the Monster was so fun to work on, and features a main character with vitiligo. However, the story isn’t about that – I just wanted to include a character with a skin condition you don’t see depicted much in children’s books. The story is actually about two kids going on an imaginary adventure to find a monster, in the morning before breakfast. I love creating children’s books featuring contemporary Black families.
Colin Meloy and Shawn Harris’ Everyone’s Awake is a great example of a funny picture book with a modern Black family, and I love Crown: An Ode to the Fresh Cut by Derrick Barnes and Gordon C James. I also highly recommend Hannah Lee and Allen Fatimaharan’s The Rapping Princess. Another book I really enjoyed is One Word From Sophia by Jim Averbeck and Yasmeen Ismail: a fantastically illustrated and warmly written picture book about a resourceful and determined little Black girl and her quest to convince her parents to let her have a pet giraffe.
A lovely slightly fairy tale-inspired tale about a family with two younger siblings and a teenager getting ready for breakfast, featuring the wonderful storytelling and word wizardry of Malorie Blackman and the illustrations of prize-winning Dapo Adeola.
Shiloh’s a princess – she’s supposed to sing, not rap. But she can’t sing at all and has better flow than all the princes of the land put together. A hip-hopping fairy tale about feeling brave to stand out and accept your uniqueness
For those who want funny books
Illustration from the front cover of Swapna Haddow and Sheena Dempsey’s Bad Panda
I also just read former BookTrust Illustrator-Writer in Residence Nadia Shireen’s new illustrated book for 6–9 year olds, Grimwood, and it made me laugh like crazy. Nadia is HILARIOUS. I’m also a huge fan of Swapna Haddow, and her new book (illustrated by Sheena Dempsey) for 6–9s, Bad Panda, is awesome.
Fox siblings Ted and Nancy live in the big city but decide to find Grimwood, a faraway forest where they can lie low. Nadia Shireen’s first illustrated middle grade novel is a brilliantly hilarious and heartwarming tale, full of her trademark anarchic humour.
If being good gets you sent to a zoo thousands of miles from home, maybe being bad will get you sent back? Anyone who’s ever been cuddled, smooshed or had their hair mussed up one too many times will empathise with Lin, who is tired of being adorable.
So those are just some off the top of my head – hope you like them!
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Those are some of our ideas – but what about you? What do you love reading?
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