Okay, so I’ve been a fan of Chad Sell’s art for quite some time now, as I think most drag fans online probably are! And because I’m a fan of his art, and because I love to support queer artists whenever and however I can, I signed up to support Chad on Patreon towards the end of 2017, which has been one fantastic investment! I genuinely look forward every month to getting that envelope in the mail with my postcard sketches and prints, and even just interacting with Chad when I make my monthly custom sketch request is always a pleasure! So of course as soon as I could I put in my preorder for The Cardboard Kingdom, and excitedly awaited its release date.
I am so happy to say that The Cardboard Kingdom did not disappoint! It was adorable and fun and interesting and sweet, and I loved every bit of it. At face value it might seem like just another children’s book about kids having fun in the summer, dressing up and fighting imaginary monsters, what have you. But really, it’s so much more than that.
Before I get into anything else, I would just like to say that the art in The Cardboard Kingdom was phenomenal. This was expected, of course, but somehow it still managed to blow me away, despite my high expectations! Each character was unique, down to the little details, and each page made me want to spend a while taking it all in. As someone who can barely put together a stick figure and whose artistic abilities are definitely more of the written variety, I’m always amazed (and so inspired!) by what visual artists can do!
Now, to the story. I looked over The Cardboard Kingdom’s reviews on Amazon before typing up my own, and noticed a common theme: the reviewers’ children loved it. And yeah, it’s maybe technically a kids’ book. But here I am, 25 years old, writing a rave review for this kids’ book, and hoping I might inspire other adults to read it as well. While, yes, the story focuses on children having fun in the last days before summer break ends and school picks back up, the themes held within the pages are themes that anyone can relate to, no matter their age. Chad Sell himself actually said to me (in a comment on Instagram, when I posted about how much I was loving the book so far, despite it being “for” younger readers), “One of my great hopes is that the book is relatable and emotional for just about every reader”. And while, yes, I am just one adult reader, if you ask me, I think this book definitely accomplishes that goal.
With such a varied cast of characters, kids of all shapes and sizes and backgrounds and personalities, there’s something in The Cardboard Kingdom for just about anyone. For kids, this is incredible because, put simply, representation matters. For a child to open up a book and see a character who looks like them, or who goes through the same struggles as them? That can be life-changing, and I’m not using hyperbole when I say that. What I wouldn’t give to have had such a book when I was a kid.
Since it’s pride month, something that’s been weighing heavy in my mind lately is the fact that so many people have these fun little stories of moments in childhood or adolescence when they realized they were -insert LGBTQIA+ identity here-. It’s painful to see all those fun stories and realize that you don’t have one of your own, because instead, you spent most of your life trying to repress those feelings, telling yourself you were wrong for having them because that’s what you were taught to believe, and trying to “make yourself” be straight. In hindsight I can look back on moments and realize just how queer I really was when I was younger, and it’s bittersweet to think of how differently things might have turned out had my environment been different.
And that’s where books like The Cardboard Kingdom come in. If younger me had read this book (and younger me loved to read- she would’ve adored this book even just at face value, never mind the deeper meaning!), she would’ve seen herself in so many of the pages. She would’ve seen herself in The Huntress, an adoring older sister to a younger brother. She would’ve seen herself in The Big Banshee, a girl who’s always just a little “too loud”, or a little “too much”. She would’ve seen herself in The Animal Queen with her adoration for all creatures, in The Blob for her “weird” ideas that no one else ever really seemed to get, in Professor Everything for her intelligence and difficulty making friends. Hell, younger me would’ve even seen herself in The Bully in some ways. And I really do think, with all that, that younger me would have felt a little less alone.
Instead, I read The Cardboard Kingdom as an adult seeing younger me in all those characters, and I can’t deny that there were tears shed throughout the book as a result. When life gets rough (as it is frequently wont to do in adulthood), it can be so good and refreshing, once in a while, to just… take a break. Lay in bed and watch cartoons or kids’ movies for a while. Color in a coloring book. Eat a Popsicle and put together a puzzle. Or pick up a book about kids having fun in the summer and simply escape.
I’d absolutely recommend picking up The Cardboard Kingdom for any children in your life, and/or for yourself.