I wanted to read this book for the illustrations, and those did not disappoint. The text, thought, is a bit of a jumble. Each page shows several kids all from the same pre-K or kindergarten class, as they prepare for their first day. Depending on their personalities and circumstances, kids prepare in different ways - getting up early, and sleeping through the alarm, buying a new backpack, or snatching up a hand-me-down, putting ribbons in their hair or barely taming their bedhead. The text talks about each of the characters in the abstract only, listing them statistically, e.g. "Six have clothes laid on a chair. / Three don't have a thing to wear!" This makes it really hard to follow the trajectory of any one child, which is really what kids would be interested in. I really felt that this was a book to help teachers realize that their students are all coming to school from very different homes, and not a first day of school book for kids. (Although, I guess if the book is meant to promote diversity, it shows kids that their classmates all come from different homes, something that seems unlikely to matter to a child already overwhelmed by starting school.) I would give the illustrations four stars, but took one away for the poor execution of the story as a whole.