Will we drive cars that float so we can zip above
traffic jams? Will you go to school at night-time
and sleep during the day? Do you think there will be
cities on the moon or beneath the sea?
And where will you be in the future? What do you
imagine you’ll be doing when you grow up? In the new
book, “Who Will I Be, Lord?” by Vaunda Micheaux
Nelson, illustrated by Sean Qualls, a little
girl wonders that same thing…
Once, a very long time ago, Great-Grandpap delivered
the mail. But that wasn’t all he did. Every weekend,
he played banjo on the radio because TV didn’t
exist. When his kids were born, Great-Grandpap gave
up his radio job to make music with his family
because nothing was more important than family.
That’s something “he learned from his own grandpa,
who was a slave.”
People said Great-Grandma was crazy when she married
Great-Grandpap because she was white and he was not.
Great-Grandma’s own family refused to see her ever
again when she got married. Maybe she was
crazy – crazy in love!
Grandpa is a preacher who says he learned The Golden
Rule from his mother. When he preaches, he doesn’t
holler – he whispers, but it reaches all the way up
to heaven.
Grandma is a teacher, and you have to be very smart
to do that. When kids say they don’t want to go to
school, she tells them how lucky they are; people
were once whipped for learning.
Grandma is proud of her education and wishes
everybody could get one, too.
Uncle is a pool shark who carries red-hot cinnamons
in his pocket. Cousin is a jazzman who makes his
living by flipping burgers at the Diner. Mama says
he has a dreamer’s heart, but he tries and that’s
what matters.
Papa is a car man who makes everybody’s vehicle as
good as new. Sometimes, he’s generous to people who
don’t have much money – just like Great-Grandpap,
who lived in a time when people helped one another.
And Mama… well, she’s Mama and she helps people,
too. She has a gift for it.
But the little girl wonders and prays. What will she
be, Lord? Who will she be? Will she ever
know?
Like a lot of grown-ups, I’m always tickled at the
multiple-choice answers that kids give to the
age-old “What do you want to be when you grow up?”
question. “Who Will I Be, Lord?” adds a cute spin to
that.
Ever-so-subtly and with a repetitive refrain, author
Vaunda Micheaux Nelson tells a story of one little
girl’s personal history and that of several
different generations. The illustrations by Sean
Qualls are simple and quietly colorful, which gives
this sweet book a reflective feel that parents can
love, too.
If your 4-to-8-year-old enjoys pretending about
“someday”, “Who Will I Be, Lord?” will be a welcome
addition to their shelves. With this book around,
expect lots of read-alouds in your future.
n