"Standing on My Own Two Feet" by Tamara Schmitz is an attempt at streamlining the concept of divorce or family separation. It is very rich in its illustrations using vibrant primary colors to bring the foreground of almost every page into attention while the cooler, more subdued colors are used to denote background information. The illustrations, in my opinion, were very well done and conveyed information effectively. The text was sparse, as is to be expected from a 1st or 2nd grade reading level piece. As far as a positive portrayal, this is an idealized presentation of divorce that is sure to comfort children and possibly be a book that is read several times. While the book does break norms for its very special audience (children in non-nuclear families), it posses no intersectionality whatsoever as it portrays a blonde haired, blue eyed protagonist. Along with that, it has some slightly ableist overtones that could certainly be problematic in certain settings. The name of the book, being the chief offender here, does not tie into any major points that the book conveys. Not every child has two feet or feet at all. Devoting an entire few pages to this idea when it doesn't tie back into the book at all felt unnecessary. On the same side of that coin, the final page felt like a cheap addition to take a stab at diversity. Throwing some different ethnicities in and the very end doesn't change the fact that the book is not diverse at all. Overall, I feel like it drove home the points that it really wanted to well. It explained divorce in an easy, comforting way, but it certainly had a lack of diversity and ableist overtones that overshadowed the primary message, in my eyes.