March 1, 2021 - Kirkus Reviews
"An award-winning New York City author/illustrator thanks all the risk-taking essential workers. The evening cheers have stopped, but the gratitude has not. Essential reading about essential workers that is informative, reassuring, and positive."
April 1, 2021 - BCCB
The ragged-right prose is compact yet gentle, focusing on the cultural rhythm and infrastructure of pandemic life without talking about COVID itself, adding character with small details about things like non-essential mail orders and insight into the importance of even pandemic-altered human contact. Line and watercolor illustrations are trim and careful, with the usual Floca tendency toward technical detail adding intricate majesty to garbage trucks and subway trains. Kids outside of New York may not be familiar with the evening applause custom, but they’ll appreciate the focus on essential work and reflection of their daily norms of online life and face-mask wearing.
March 1, 2021 - Publishers Weekly *STARRED REVIEW*
With his signature affection for architecture and keen sense of urban space, Caldecott Medalist Floca pays tribute to the frontline workers helping to make New York City run during the pandemic. Floca brings precision and expert draftsmanship to renderings of working vehicles, centering the heroes working to get supplies out and save lives, and to the equipment that helps them do it.
June 2021 - School Library Journal
A thoughtful book of gratitude for the essential workers with a nod to the unifying theme that we are #allinthistogether. An important title, it will open the door for discussion of the pandemic and its effects.–Ramarie Beaver, formerly at Plano P.L., TX
April 1, 2021 - Booklist STARRED Review
An ode to the city workers keeping New York City going during the COVID-19 pandemic.
With lyrical text and exquisite, detailed illustrations, Floca reminds readers of the early days of the pandemic with an empty city street. Well, almost empty. A hint of movement in these opening scenes turns into a full-page spread with food deliverers on bikes. Of course, first responders—the fire department, police officers, ambulance drivers, and health care workers—are depicted prominently, but so too are the workers who suddenly become frontline service and care. A moving tribute that remembers essential workers and community in a time of loss.
March/April 2021 - Horn Book Magazine
Caldecott winner Floca presents a love letter to New York City, and its essential workers, during COVID-19. Motion-filled vignettes alternate with expansive spreads to help pace the narrative and hold readers’ attention. The text is true to events but un-alarmist, with restrained lyricism that underscores unity: “We hear the city say to us—and we say back to the city—that we are still here, and we are here together.
Kirkus Reviews
★ 2021-02-09
An award-winning New York City author/illustrator thanks all the risk-taking essential workers.
In the first days, weeks, and months of the Covid-19 pandemic, life on city streets changed from busy congestion to an eerie quiet. Two children, looking concerned, gaze out from their apartment-house window at a strangely empty scene. Almost the only souls about are delivering food on bikes, hauling flats in supermarkets, or driving buses, trains, and taxis. Sanitation workers, letter carriers, and utility workers continue their work on and under the streets. Firefighters, police officers, and hospital workers are busy. Diverse apartment-house dwellers play their appreciative part, though. Every evening at 7:00 they erupt into a cacophony: noisily cheering, banging pots, and blowing musical instruments. “We are here together.” The narration is in the voice of a very observant child who has not lost their sense of humor, voicing some doubts about a nonessential online purchase. A community spirit shines in the use of we. Floca’s signature illustrations offer meticulously detailed renditions of city buildings and a wide assortment of urban vehicles. Everyone is properly masked. The evening cheers have stopped, but the gratitude has not. The story was first developed as a YouTube video, and here the sound effects are missing, but they can be easily and enthusiastically added by young readers. (This book was reviewed digitally with 10-by-18-inch double-page spreads viewed at 64.9% of actual size.)
Essential reading about essential workers that is informative, reassuring, and positive. (author's note) (Picture book. 4-8)