This children’s book is a picture book story that is deeply influenced by Native American storytelling. The book is about the Moon who gets bullied by the big Sun. The moon enjoys dancing and being free but the sun speaks angrily to the moon and tells her she is ugly. This hinders her dancing because the Sun’s mean words upset her so greatly and she begins to feel very small. She becomes a sliver of her once, full size. The Moon’s friend, Comet, notices she is upset and that she got smaller. He advises her to go to Round Arms, a woman on Earth, who will restore the Moon’s health. By the time the Moon appeared on Earth to Round Arm’s hut, she was almost invisible. The Moon told Round Arms about how hurtful the words the Sun told her were and how the Sun’s bullying made her shrink. Round Arm takes the Moon to people who miss her and her beautiful shining light in the darkness. This makes the Moon feel better. The more compliments the Moon receives from the people on Earth, the bigger she begins to grow. When the Moon regains her original size, she goes back to the sky and exclaims, “The Sun has his job and his admirers, and I have my job and my friends”. The Moon begins to dance again and when someone bullies her, such as the Sun, she recalls all of her friends on Earth who miss her and need her light in the darkness.
This book is a good addition for a text set on bullying. In this story, the Sun is the bully who victimizes the Moon and makes her upset. This will help children to deal and cope with their bullies. The Moon goes to Earth to confide in Round Arms, who helps the Moon realize she is loved by many and she is important. This book teaches the strategies of regaining self-confidence, which the Moon does by the end of the book. It also encourages children to tell an adult and ask for help when they are being victimized. The Moon asks Round Arms for help. With her help, and through gaining self-confidence, the Moon was able to regain her shape and not let the Sun’s mean words upset her.