The carefully chosen combination of visual details and large abstract areas support the notion that love is not always clearly definable. The black characters in Grandpa's Face do not serve any didactic purpose they simply love and grow. Greenfield's other books, Grandmama's Joy (Philomel, 1980) and Honey, I Love and Other Love Poems (Crowell, 1978), like the works of Ezra Jack Keats, Sharon Bell Mathis, Jeannette Caines, and Charlotte Zolotow, are strong statements about love. Striking, in text and illustration, is the moment when Grandpa catches up with Tamika, and gently all is resolved. It was a face that could never love her or anyone.'' These are powerful words that evoke an unforgettable and horrible visual image, and Tamika acts out her inner turmoil at a catastrophic family dinner scene. Tamika loves her Grandpa, and at the theater she watches him turn ``into another person.'' While he is practicing in a mirror, however, she sees a part of his personality that she does not understand, and it frightens her. PreSchool-Grade 2 Muted realistic paintings complement this story of Tamika, a young girl who grows emotionally through love.
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