This book's language clearly reveals the hand of a poet. Tallie's metaphorical language evokes imagery that encourages young readers to dream and look both within and around them to find their own sources of happiness. Layla marvels that 'the sea reaches into her pocket to give me a sand dollar' and chooses the full moon as her favorite thing because 'it sits in the sky like a wish flower's sister.' Equally as imaginative as the lyrical text, Corrin's boldly colored, textured illustrations beautifully capture the buoyant spirit of Layla, a brown girl exuding confidence, comfortable in her own skin-indoors and out. Well-illustrated poetry of the best kind that will leave sunshine in its wake. -STARRED REVIEW, Kirkus
Tallie honors the many ways children define happiness...A handsome and helpful primer on self-reflection and a mirror to urban black and brown children, this joyous title could be well paired with Samantha Berger's What If. -STARRED REVIEW, School Library Journal
A celebration of community, but also individualism, what Layla loves and what makes her happy is so specific to her and her family's experience. In uncertain or challenging times, books like Layla's Happiness are bright spots of inspiration. They carry us through and remind us of the gifts we have. The gifts of people in our lives or small moments in nature or even a favorite color. -The Eric Carle Museum
When you're sadder than an Adele song, read
Layla's Happiness. Leave it to a seven year-old to teach you more about happiness than a Positive Psychology expert. Our protagonist, Layla, is all Good Vibes as she bestows the reader with the eyes of a precocious child, seeing the world with delight and wonder, emphasizing a love of family, friends, and nature. The full moon is one of Layla's favorite things because 'it sits in the sky like a wish flower's sister.' This incredibly swoony book teaches you to relook at your surroundings and appreciate life's simple pleasures, ie. eating spaghetti sans fork.
-JM Farkas, LitHubSeven-year-old Layla loves a lot of things: nighttime, purple plums, eating spaghetti without a fork, and listening to her parents tell stories and read poems. Both whimsical and firmly rooted in a realistic city setting, this deceptively simple story is packed with beautiful, small moments to cherish. Moreover, Layla's sunshiny view of existence is infectious, and will inspire kids to share what excites them. -Book Riot