“’Children aren’t against anything,’ she said. ‘Children are just children. They have to go to school, study hard, play and be good to their parents.’” These are the words Pedro’s mother gives him to help him understand his role in a place where the military dictatorship is taking over their lives. In this story, young Pedro, who simply wants to play soccer, is instructed by the dictatorship to write a composition entitled, “What My Family Does at Night.” In this story, Antonio Skármeta shares the innocence of children, and how they are forced to show courage in a world where they make no decisions. Like many Latino/a stories, this book shares the importance of families sticking together, even when there are attempts to break them apart. The full-page illustrations are definitive and also capture the innocence of the children in this story. The illustrator, Alfonso Ruano, cleverly articulates the children’s hearts through their facial expressions. I would love to share this book with my third graders, who have some understanding about types of governments, including dictatorships. The book shares a difficult topic in an understandable way for children.