Outside, Inside, written and illustrated by LeUyen Pham, portrays life during the pandemic, not only as to what is happening inside and outside of our homes but also looking at humanity towards others during this time. When the pandemic began, the author started jotting down details about how the world was changing and eventually decided to turn these notes into a documentation of the events in the form of a children’s picture book. The paintings and descriptions throughout the story are based on real people and real happenings.
Early in the story, her repetitive use of the words “Everyone/ everywhere” gave this story a global feel. At the midpoint of the story, a great question is posed “So why did we all go inside?”
Her pictures show that nature slowly took over outside during the pandemic. People painstakingly began to keep a distance from others and to wear masks. Inside, we baked, played, read, sang, watched movies. As the story progresses, people are waiting, laughing, crying, hoping, praying and wishing. As the story progresses, outside our plants are growing and growing. Inside, we mark our heights on a wall, and we too are growing!
Beautiful two-page picture spreads show how we all look different (different faces and nationalities), yet the next two-page spread shows how we are the same on the inside, with potential to have and share love. To end the story, there is a four-page open spread that takes a positive look at how our lives have progressed through the pandemic, both inside and outside of our homes.
The author has a very important message at the book’s closing. It is helpful to read this to create some good talking and questioning points for the listeners. After the first reading of the story, it works to go back through the book and treat it as a wordless book. The pictures on every page have so much to say about how the coronavirus has affected our lives in 2020.
This is a great documentation of the pandemic. A younger child will look at the story and see it as a picture book of people doing things inside and outside of the home. It is fun to follow the neighborhood black cat through the story. First graders and older can appreciate the story as a look at the pandemic and how it changed everything!