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While We’re Here

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Award-winning creators Anne Wynter and Micha Archer share a mother-daughter tale about delighting in small pleasures throughout the city. Perfect for fans of Oge Mora and Sophie Blackall.

Anne Wynter perfectly captures the hurry and hustle of a busy day. But when plans change and a girl and her mother slow down to savor small pleasures, the real celebration begins.

Dazzling, kaleidoscopic cut paper artwork from Caldecott Honor artist Micha Archer highlights each special moment in this sweet tribute to time spent together.

40 pages, Hardcover

Published March 24, 2026

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Anne Wynter

15 books69 followers

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Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
Profile Image for Martha Meyer.
797 reviews17 followers
April 30, 2026
I love Anne Wynter's story, calling us to slow down and enjoy the natural world amidst all the rushing around to which we subject our kids, even just to attend a birthday party. Micha Archer's art is sublime, too, layered and layered with pattern and richness. The text of the story starts with hurry hurry, repeated and repeated until the reader is breathless. Then it starts to slow down and eventually slowing down to "We have nowhere to be," so the performance of reading aloud corresponds perfectly with the pictures -- and the lesson we all need to learn. Lovely.
Profile Image for Betsy.
Author 11 books3,317 followers
May 8, 2026
Oh, gatekeepers. Ours is a tricky lot to live. Imagine that you are in a position where you can see hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of new picture books published in a given year. You want to make sure that the future recipients of these books are just seeing the best stuff, right? I mean, in a sea of completely okay books, there’s always some remarkable little glorious gem worth discovering. The trouble is that when you decide what is and isn't worthy, you have to do this while also keeping in mind that YOU are not the intended audience here. It is awfully easy for adults to find certain topics or art styles of interest, while the child readers’ eyes slowly glaze over during a read. Similarly, what if a book displays a realistic moment that you, the grown-up, identify with while your kid doesn’t at all? Who is the book really for then? Such were the thoughts coagulating in my cranium as I read While We’re Here. Just to give away the game, I love this book deeply and thoroughly. But do I love it because I’m a parent and this storyline is SO relatable or because I think it’s a high-quality book that a kid will really enjoy? Or can both things be true at the same time?

“Hurry, hurry, jackets zipped. Hurry, hurry, out the door.” A mom and daughter dressed to the nines, toting a white present wrapped in a red ribbon, travel at top speed. They’re clearly late for some kind of a party, and so they zip through subway tunnels and run down park lanes. Yet when they arrive, not only is no one there, but it clearly looks like someone used to be. Where are the people? A quick look about and it turns out the party was yesterday. Do they wallow in their misery? They could, but mom adeptly distracts her daughter with the wonders of the park. There are ducks, and tunnels. There are hills to roll down and trails to explore. By the end, they slow down and take everything in. Hurry? Nah. They have nowhere to be.

I have to credit my children’s librarian co-workers. They were the ones a year or two ago that clued me into the important role that picture books with simple texts play in our world. I’m an adult. I love sophistication. I like cleverness. When a text is simple, I can’t use my usual methodology to gauge its success. I have to read the book in an entirely new way. But then Anne Wynter comes along with a very simple text, but also a situation that both kids and their guardians are going to understand entirely: your grown-up messed up. You had a fun thing you were going to, and now you have no fun thing at all. And it’s not because of you, kid. It’s because of your parent. Now the logical response to this is anger at the parent and sadness for the loss. Wynter’s book becomes this phenomenal mentor text because she acknowledges the sadness, but rather than wait to have the kid work herself up into a screaming catfit of some sort, the mom has this fascinating technique. Until the party, the repeated lines have been “Hurry, hurry”, all culminating in that final sentence before the reveal of, “Hurry, hurry, up the hill. We have somewhere to be!” After that, mom exchanges the “Hurry, hurry” to “We’ll head back home, but while we’re here…” which is a fascinating distraction. In the art you can see that she is the only rolling down a nearby hill in her fancy dress. She is the one leading the two of them under a stone bridge to explore. She is the one reaching out to the ducklings. The practicality of heading back home is continually usurped, so that it feels like mom and kid are getting away with something (thereby appeasing the child). It’s a parenting method I can relate to since I truly believe that distraction with small children is more art than science.

I would be amiss in not touching on some of the cadences chosen for the text as well. It doesn’t rhyme, at the beginning, did you notice? “Hurry, hurry” is rhythmic, absolutely, but as easy as it might be to do some kind of a rhyme (the missing shoe sequence, in particular, almost begs for it). By not rhyming, Wynter almost increases the tension of getting to the party on time. Then, when everything has gone down, and the daughter isn’t as upset anymore, and they’re taking their time, listen to what the text does at the end. “We’ll head back home, eventually. / We’ll sit awhile, beneath a tree. / We’ll wander off, just you and me. / We have nowhere to be.” Aside from the “nowhere to be” acting as a flip of the earlier “We have somewhere to be!” when they’re running to the party, that four sentence rhyming sequence slows the read, and then ends the entire book with this satisfying thump. I tried to describe it some other way, but “satisfying thump” is, I will maintain, still the best way to say what this book does. Thump. So satisfying!

There’s collage and then there’s COLLAGE (all caps, bold as brass). Think of Eric Carle’s collage art. Meticulously hand-painted papers, cut to size, often placed against pure white backgrounds. How pretty. This is not the Micha Archer way. Micha’s collages crowd the pages. They hustle up to her human figures leaving not so much as a millimeter of pure white to be found. Just to clarify, I’ve no special insights into how Micha makes her books. I don’t even know the order of her process. Does she paint her characters first and then collage around their painted parts? Does she collage first and then paint on top of the papers? Beats the friggin’ heck out of me, but what works, works. Winner of the Caldecott Honor for Wonder Walkers, Archer has previously done books with relatively calm levels of emotional content. I’m not saying they don’t have plots, but those plots do anything but keep at an even keel. The parental betrayal we witness in this book is a wholly new thing for me to encounter in a Micha Archer title. Look at that wordless two-page spread of the party picnic table, empty, abandoned, paper cups left to rot in the sun. A nearby trashcan overflows with wrapping paper, a sole sad balloon floats, and in a bold move that shows the artist’s expertise, the hanging words “Happy Birthday” are backwards. Why did Archer make them backwards? Because it makes the two pages feel just a little bit... wrong. And part of what I love so much about this moment is that adult reader and child reader can come into this scene and be just as baffled as the main characters, until all is explained. Now look at the pages. Until now the white parts of the pages that contain the text have been in bands on the bottom of the pages. Once this moment of revelation happens, the world is compacted into circles. Only when mom finds ways of using nature and play to cheer up her kid do the collages explode again and you end with a full page, no white space at all, in a final image of mom and daughter. Brilliant choices from start to finish.

I mean, are we gonna talk at this point about the book’s use of red? Might as well. Red balloons are classic picture book staples (even if the original Red Balloon picture book consisted of movie stills). Take a moment to admire this cover too. Red on mom’s top, red on the daughter’s top, those red shoes the kid is wearing, and then, almost subtle, red balloon that floats over their heads. There’s just this one yellow string bisecting mom’s face, matching the earrings of both mom and child, literally tying the whole image together. As we read the book, there is also the red ribbon around the present that never gets delivered (and that, to my infinite satisfaction, makes it into the final image of the book). Red is present in other pictures as well, but Archer keeps the two main characters foregrounded, their reds making them easy to spot, even when they’re far away from the reader. In the two-page spread of the missed party, they stand in red on the left, and that abandoned balloon floats morosely on the right. Then, in the last image in the book, the sky is a pink color, the closest it can get to matching their outfits (and, indeed, the pinks of their tutu and pants echo it). So much care. So much thought. So much attention goes into a book of this sort.

So yes, this is a book for both gatekeepers and children. It’s fun for both. It appeals to both. And it also features Black characters. This fact might not have been quite so notable, even as recently as four years ago, but in recent times our children’s publishing industry has experienced a cool down. Black creators like Wynter aren’t getting published at the same rate as they used to be. When they do, their books tend to be about meaningful topics, like believing in yourself, which, while completely necessary, is rather limited. So apart from everything else that I like about this book, I just like that it’s a book about a mom and kid bonding, and they happen to be Black. I would kill for a hundred more books like this one. Books that have this much thought and time and attention by Black creators like Wynter and speak to universal topics that we haven’t seen in picture books before. While We’re Here is a masterclass in cohesive storytelling, where the simple text is doing more work than you initially notice, and the art is matching it beat for beat. Looks simple. Ain’t. And I love that for it.
Profile Image for Dest.
1,896 reviews194 followers
April 29, 2026
This reminded me of Saturday because both books are about a mom and daughter dealing with disappointment with grace. I think they both use collage in the illustrations as well, but Wynter's style is more detailed.

I read this at my evening story time and I felt like it resonated with the kids and parents. We all loved the illustrations, of course!
5 reviews
April 3, 2026
Quick read with beautiful collage style illustrations about a mom and daughter in a rush to a birthday party only to discover it had happened the day before. After working through that dissapointment they discover they can slow down and just enjoy being together for the day.
Profile Image for Becca.
1,686 reviews
April 8, 2026
Love love love the illustrations! I had a little struggle with the break in the rhythm-rhyme, but the story is delightful. I will reread this one at a slower pace so I can soak in the details. And see what difference reading it aloud makes.
Profile Image for Alyssa Gudenburr.
2,675 reviews19 followers
April 13, 2026
A beautifully illustrated story about a mother and daughter who hurry to a party only to find they missed it. Instead of becoming depressed, they turn the day into a fun one to spend together. Reminds us to slow down and enjoy time spent together, even if plans change.
Profile Image for Linda Clements.
41 reviews1 follower
April 20, 2026
Sweet story of turning a sad situation into a redeemed story. The cut paper collage artwork by Micha Archer is *chef’s kiss” magical and glorious! This could easily be used as inspiration for a class art project. 😍
Profile Image for Debra Hines.
717 reviews10 followers
May 3, 2026
Beautifully illustrated with sparse prose. Shows how a mother can take a disappointment and find joy instead. Lovely book. I'm looking at other children's books by this author and illustrator and hoping they will be as delightful as this one.
Profile Image for Heather.
1,365 reviews11 followers
May 5, 2026
Ug, the contrast between movement and slowness in the art is everything! And the use of size! Tight focus when in a rush and broader perspective when checking things out/going slowly—kills me how good it is! Amazing use of cut paper.
Profile Image for Elisabeth.
2,074 reviews25 followers
May 7, 2026
This is picture book perfection! The narrative, the cadence and the art! Oh the art! I want Micha Archer to win the Caldecott and I think this is the one! The first page of the little girl putting on her shoes -- the bend of her legs brought tears to my eyes, it's just so sweet and real.
Profile Image for Lynn  Hardesty.
235 reviews1 follower
March 25, 2026
Story: Heartwarming
Illustrations: Extraordinary!

I can't imagine how long some of these pages took to put together. Simply amazing.
Profile Image for Ricki.
Author 2 books114 followers
March 30, 2026
As a mom who is always hurry, hurry, hurrying, I very much appreciate books that remind me to slow down and look around at the beautiful world. This is a beautiful book with gorgeous illustrations!
3,268 reviews19 followers
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April 14, 2026
Really beautiful book with black characters. I like that they are in a hurry and then...they are not. While We're Here is a really great title. Taking in whatever is around them.
Author 26 books5 followers
April 24, 2026
I love the artwork in this book! It's so pretty!
Profile Image for Krista.
1,355 reviews31 followers
April 28, 2026
A typical city scene with lots of rush, rush, rush!
But in the end this mom and daughter learn to slow down and enjoy their surroundings.
Profile Image for Vivian M.
32 reviews
May 7, 2026
Absolutely stunning images. I marvel at how readable each spread is while being abundant with pattern and design. Very much like Saturday by Oge Mora.
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews