My family reads all the Goodreads-award-nominated picture books every year. This is book #8 (of more than 20) of 2019, and we, except for the newly curmudgeon Hank, thought it was one of the better ones, maybe in the top three. Mo Willems has written more than 50 picture books, and his illustrator Amber Ren has done one, this one. It's about creativity, the arts, focused on how a girl decides to become a musician. Ren links her own decision to becoming an artist to the moment she saw a pithing by John Singer Sergeant.
Lyra (12): 4. I like the simplicity of everything. The drawings are sweet, and those colorful musical notes I totally loved. You could feel the emotions these musicians felt. Everything connects for the best, and music you see as such wondrous art.
Hank (13): 1. Because this happened, for half the story (too repetitious), then a girl grows up to be a musician and we're supposed to be so moved.
Harry (14): 4. I like how everyone helped each other and influenced each other without knowing it.
Tara: 4.5. This was simple and sweet.
Dave: 3.5. Deliberately vague title. I suppose it's about the serendipity of influence on how people choose art for their lives as Willems and Ren do. There's a lot of books about art and creativity by artists, and this is one. She hears the music of Lizst and it changes her life. It's not particularly original but well done.