Product Details
Susan Laughs

Susan Laughs
By Jeanne Willis, Tony Ross

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Product Description

Susan laughs, she sings. she rides, she swings.
She gets angry, she gets sad, she is good, she is bad...

Told in rhyme, this story follows Susan through a series of familiar activities. She swims with her father, works hard in school, plays with her friends -- and even rides a horse. Lively, thoughtfully drawn illustrations reveal a portrait of a busy, happy little girl with whom younger readers will identify. Not until the end of the story is it revealed that Susan uses a wheelchair.

Told with insight, and without sentimentality, here is an inspiring look at one spunky little girl whose physical disability is never seen as a handicap.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #224982 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-09-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 36 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal
PreSchool-Grade 1-Through simple rhyming phrases, readers learn about the many things that a young redheaded girl can do: "Susan trots,/Susan rows,/Susan paints,/Susan throws." With great color and movement, the pencil-and-crayon illustrations depict this spirited child in her everyday world. She rides a swing with her father, plays a trick on her grandma, and boils with anger when her cat scratches her face. Abundant details such as patterned wallpaper and funny portraits on walls add interest to each scene. By the end of the story, children will identify completely with Susan, who is "through and through-/just like me, just like you," even if she happens to use a wheelchair, as shown in the final illustration. Thus, the story focuses on her abilities rather than on the things by which she is limited. This book works for sharing one-on-one, for smaller storytimes, and for classroom use.
Linda M. Kenton, San Rafael Public Library, CA
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Without being condescending or preachy, the words, pictures, and design of this very simple picture book show that a physically disabled child is "just like me, just like you." Only on the very last page do we discover that Susan uses a wheelchair. Before that, the simple, rhyming words and active crayon-and-pencil pictures show her in a succession of ordinary scenarios that every preschooler will recognize. Susan laughs. Susan sings. Susan's good. Susan's bad. She's mad. She's shy. She swims. She swings. She sulks. She's scared. The show and tell works. Children will enjoy seeing their common feelings and experiences. They'll be surprised by that wheelchair at the end; and then they'll accept their connection with the child who they've come to know is "just like me." Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author
Jeanne Willis lives in London, England with her husband and two children.

Tony Ross has illustrated more than 50 books for children, and has won many illustration awards. Mr. Ross lives with his wife and daughter in Cheshire, England.


Customer Reviews

delightful and important5
I have cerebral palsy and almost cried after reading this book. I wish it had been around when I was in elementary school. Things might have been much easier and less painful.

There are scores of books out there that aim to educate about people/children with disabilities, but they haven't achieved this with such simple clarity as _Susan Laughs_ reveals. Most of these other books, while they certainly educate about the disabilities and may make them less intimidating for children, never really tell us about the CHILD. There are always words like "special" in the title or the end message of the book, and I've always been careful about that word. "Special" in this context just seems to highlight the fact that someone uses a wheelchair or crutches or the like, and such overuse of the word may impart to other children that the way disabled children do things is so far from theirs that they can't relate. Also, some of these books portray disabilities as curiosities. I'm all for perceiving a disability as a unique *trait* of an individual, but too often, what these books give is an image of someone to *help*, rather than someone to befriend spontaneously. As an example, I've read reviewers of other books who stated that after a class read the book, the kids argued over who would get to help her child. This just seems a little distancing to me, as if the child is a project rather than a true friend.

_Susan Laughs_, on the other hand, really introduces a delightful little girl. (When I read picture books to kids, I treat the characters as people for them to meet.) It tells about her interests and personality, offset by vivid and quirky illustrations, and NOT ABOUT HER DISABILITY! Her disability is part of her, as they see on the last page, but it is not a separate *strangeness*, as books with "Special" in the titles seem to imply. They really liked Susan because she did the things they did--and the kids knew this because they met Susan first, and not her wheelchair.

This book flawlessly presents proof that children with disabilities are, in personality, sense of humor, and soul, just like other children. I can't imagine why no one presented this theme in such a manner before--if you're going to say a disabled child is just like you, put her seamlessly in fun, everyday situations. That *proves* it--that speaks so much better than explaining a disability and then having to *convince* readers of their similarity. "Special" books risk implying that the disability is a foreign thing or something wrong that must be given charity.

I can't stress enough how important _Susan Laughs_ is. Every parent of small children and every school librarian should read this book aloud to their kids at the earliest age possible, before the prejudice seeps in. Children do not know that something is "wrong" with another child unless adults present it that way. If children meet Susan, they hopefully will understand that they truly can make friends with disabled children--that they all have things in common to talk and joke about, and they don't have to be awkward around each other. I know you can't reach all kids and there's still teasing and worse, but I really think the concept this book espouses is vital and could have a tremendous effect on the self-esteem of kids with disabilities if this book is taught early enough.

Please--if you are a parent or a librarian or anyone interested in working with kids, buy this book and read it to them. There are so many teenagers and adults who have not yet grasped this concept. While they may or may not change their minds after reading this, I am confident that young children will come away with a vastly different view of disabilities than the one I suffered under, and maybe there won't be such a struggle to *prove* equality as there once was. Please really think about this book.

Charming Reality Check about Disabled Children5
The author and illustrator have done a wonderful job with this show-and-tell story that details all the ways Susan is just like anyone else---until her "difference" is confirmed at the very end.

Obviously aimed at the younger readers, the book's subtle message could be lost on some of the small fry unless an adult spends a moment explaining to them what the real message of the story. I would love to know, too, how many adults can guess the ending. I suspect that unless they are the parents or caretakers of a disabled child, that they too may be surprised. I especially liked the pages showing Susan dancing with her granddad, getting in trouble, and playing with other kids.

Though concepts such as diversity and inclusion are relentlessly idolized today, the truth is children---and adults---with physical disabilities remain needlessly excluded through both physical and social barriers. In that regard, this gentle book, which can only help open doors for the disabled, is recommended reading for every person with a heart and mind. The best part is that it may change how you react next time you meet a child in a wheelchair.

I Laugh too5
This is a wonderful Book! I have taken this book with me to every family I babysit for - Every child has asked me to read it again. The pictures are great - very expressive. This book is great for all children. What is great is that each child I babysit for has had a different reaction to the final picture (The only picture of Susan in a wheelchair). Some older children have told me about a kid in their grade who uses a wheelchair, some of the younger kids show no surprise whatsever - to them Susan really is no different anyway!