Publishers Weekly
10/09/2023
From the moment she tumbles out of bed, young Leda, portrayed with light brown skin, places the blame for her off-kilter day with the biggest force of them all: “Gravity was in a bad mood. Again.” This Mercury-retrograde-like occurrence means that nothing goes right in Leda’s orbit—a series of slips, spills, and trips at home lead to more of the same at school. Smartly choreographed mixed-media cartoons use realism to depict a comic cascade of woe, including a major fail in the class pyramid-building contest and a bibliographic mess caused by a runaway library cart. Even when a lesson reveals gravity’s value (“Without the sun’s gravity, our solar system would fly apart”), the force seems intent on getting Leda down. But Mom knows how to get things back in sync: a cosmic reboot at the local children’s museum’s interactive space exhibit. In this funny, fresh take on a day gone wrong, Van Draanen (Mr. Whiskers and the Shenanigan Sisters) and Li (Hello, Opportunity) are sympathetic to their protagonist’s travails, presenting readers with the opportunity to see in resilient Leda—and themselves—that whatever gravity may throw down, they’ll rise above it. Ages 4–8. Author’s agent: Ginger Knowlton, Curtis Brown. Illustrator’s agent: Caryn Wiseman, Andrea Brown Literary. (Jan.)
From the Publisher
"In this funny, fresh take on a day gone wrong, Van Draanen and Li are sympathetic to their protagonist’s travails, presenting readers with the opportunity to see in resilient Leda—and themselves—that whatever gravity may throw down, they’ll rise above it." —Publishers Weekly
"This cheerful tale uses Leda’s case of the clumsies to introduce the concept of gravity. An engaging flight of imagination, grounded in fact." —Kirkus Reviews
"A perfect read for a day when everything feels wildly imperfect, this offers a stealthy combination of science and social/emotional learning." — Bulletin
"Van Draanen presents a fun exploration of gravity by making the science lesson engaging and accessible. And most everyone can relate to Leda and her clumsy day!" —School Library Journal
School Library Journal
01/19/2024
Gr 1–3—Readers will be delighted to learn that gravity causes our falls, spills, and tumbles; in fact, "Leda knew the minute she fell out of bed—gravity was in a bad mood." So begins Leda's day grappling with gravity: splattering food, fumbling and stumbling, and generally having a rough time. A lesson at school helps to explain some rules of the scientific concept, but an afterschool trip to the children's museum with her mom really brings Leda and gravity to some kind of an understanding. Van Draanen presents a fun exploration of gravity by making the science lesson engaging and accessible. And most everyone can relate to Leda and her clumsy day! Li's illustrations colorfully depict the romp with gravity and Leda's every emotion. VERDICT Recommended purchase to strengthen and broaden science picture book collections; this makes concepts accessible to children and educators looking for another way into physics.—Cassie Veselovsky
Kirkus Reviews
2023-12-06
Leda learns about gravity the hard way.
This cheerful tale uses Leda’s case of the clumsies to introduce the concept of gravity. The child falls out of bed, spills her cereal, trips while getting on the bus, and tips the book cart over. Gravity must be in a bad mood, she concludes. Leda’s teacher works in a hands-on lesson on how gravity keeps planets in orbit around the sun and points out that it’s also what keeps everything in its place on Earth. Still, nothing seems to go right until a trip to a children’s museum, where she climbs and slides and simulates space flight, which brings a peaceful resolution between an active Leda and anchoring gravity. The appealingly bright, textured illustrations lift this title above other STEM-themed picture books. Leda’s bedroom is filled with space-themed objects, the school playground is enticing, and the museum’s activities seem designed for an energetic child’s after-school enjoyment. A popular middle-grade writer noted for several successful fiction series, Van Draanen proves adept at conveying STEM-related info for the picture-book crowd. Very different in approach from Jason Chin’s Gravity (2014), the two books would nevertheless make an excellent pairing. Leda and her family are Asian, while the students and museumgoers are racially diverse.
An engaging flight of imagination, grounded in fact. (Informational picture book. 5-8)