Testimonials
Testimonials
Hear What Our Global Clients Say
Read how ‘Pop Pop Looks Like Me’ helped families discuss aging, family connections, and accepting change. These reflections come from parents, grandparents, and educators who used the book to open important conversations with children.
My five year old was confused about why her great grandmother looked so different from pictures we had shown her. This book gave us a way to talk about it that she understood. After reading it together, she asked to see more old photos and started making connections herself. The story made something abstract feel concrete for her.
John Doe
As a grandmother, I appreciated how this book treats the child's feelings seriously. Evan is not told he is being silly for being upset. His emotions are validated before he is guided toward understanding. That is exactly how adults should handle these moments with children, and seeing it modeled in a story was helpful.
Martin Guptil
I teach first grade and we read this during a unit on families. Several students had never met their grandparents or only knew them as elderly people. The book sparked great conversations about how everyone changes and how we can still recognize family connections even when people look different.
Alex Hales
My son has mild anxiety about change and new situations. Meeting his grandfather for the first time was stressful because the grandfather did not look like my son expected from photos. Reading this book beforehand helped prepare him. He still felt surprised, but he had language for what he was feeling and understood it was normal.
David Warner
What I loved about this story is that it does not rush Evan toward acceptance. He gets to be upset. He gets to have a tantrum. Then, when he is ready, his mother helps him understand. Too many children's books skip over the messy emotions and go straight to the lesson. This one honors the process of getting there.
Alize Shah
My daughter asked why I have gray hair now when I had brown hair in old pictures. This book helped me explain aging in a way that made sense to her. She kept saying "you are still you" afterward, which was exactly the point.
Amanda