This is one of those rare picture books that adults genuinely enjoy as much as kids. Colón has created something special here—a book that doesn't just tell you imagination is important, but actually requires and rewards it.
The wordless format is a feature, not a limitation. It means every reading is different, every child brings their own interpretation, and families can return to it again and again without it getting stale. It's also brilliantly inclusive—no reading level barriers, works across languages, and features a protagonist of color in a context (fine art appreciation) where representation matters.
The six starred reviews aren't hype—this book earned them. It's beautiful, it's meaningful, and it does something picture books should do more often: it shows rather than tells. The experience of being moved by art, of having your imagination ignited, of seeing the world differently afterward—that's all here, communicated through images alone.
If your kid gravitates toward quiet, beautiful things, this is a slam dunk. If they're more action-oriented, it might take a couple reads to click, but it's worth the investment.






