March 27, 2025

No Huddles for Heloise

Written by Deborah Kerbel
Illustrated by Udayana Lugo
Orca Book Publishers
978-1-4598-3910-6
32 pp.
Ages 4-7
March 2025 

I like Heloise. Heloise knows what she likes and doesn't like. She likes sledding and fish popsicles, sharing rocks with friends, and her own space. 
From No Huddles for Heloise, written by Deborah Kerbel, illustrated by Udayana Lugo
What she doesn't like, other than the leopard seals that no penguins like, are crowds and hullabaloo and those huddles that penguins do for warmth and protection. Those huddles that are just too close.
Huddles give Heloise the heebie-jeebies.
The jim-jams.
The willies.
And the collywobbles.
From No Huddles for Heloise, written by Deborah Kerbel, illustrated by Udayana Lugo
But how can she say no to the other penguins and not hurt their feelings? Typically, she has a number of excuses from taking her fish for a walk or polishing her rock collection. Heloise is perfectly happy on her own, enjoying her things, her space, and her own thoughts. 
From No Huddles for Heloise, written by Deborah Kerbel, illustrated by Udayana Lugo
But then the other penguins stop asking her to join them in huddles and Heloise begins to question her own wants and needs, and seeks companions elsewhere. Unfortunately, her travels are disappointing and even dangerous on her own and she returns home to find that her friends have found a way to accommodate her need for personal space while offering her the protection that huddles provide.

It's lovely to read a story about an introverted character who doesn't feel compelled to fit in with the extroverts or have the extroverts demand that their way of socializing and gregarious behaviour is preferable and, worse, the norm. I'm so glad Deborah Kerbel, an accomplished writer of picture books, middle grade and YA, demonstrates an acceptance of the introverted Heloise rather than sympathy for her nature. (The sympathy should be towards the attitude she experiences from those who are not introverted.) Instead, Deborah Kerbel validates the fullness of Heloise's life without the partying and closeness demanded or even just requested by her penguin peers. Heloise is a happy penguin, accepting of her nature and choices. She's never rude but she is true to her herself. Too bad that she feels like she doesn't belong because belonging does not mean being the same as others.
From No Huddles for Heloise, written by Deborah Kerbel, illustrated by Udayana Lugo
I love the positive messages that Deborah Kerbel gives us in No Huddles for Heloise, and BC's Udayana Lugo gives us the whimsy of that message in Heloise and her friends. From their accessories, like pom-pom hats, scarves, and bandanas, to props like a rock polisher or a whale stuffed animal, Udayana Lugo demonstrates the differences among the penguins are the norm and Heloise's introversion is just another manifestation of wonderful diversity. She created her art primarily using gouache and coloured pencils, which gives a bright and rich portrayal of the penguins and the landscape in which they live and play.
 
I'm with Heloise–except for the fish popsicles–that quiet and solitary activities offer comfort in ways that many extroverts will never understand. While we all must engage with others for safety, for work, or for other needs, it's lovely to see Heloise be accepted and even accommodated for her needs, not chastised for being different.

No comments:

Post a Comment