An engaging look at the component numbers in just about everything. Hood uses simple rhymed couplets pitched to offer examples of single units composed of one to 10 separate parts. Yan's bright, full-page illustrations in cartoon-animation style star a small, dark-haired, pale-skinned child with a diverse supporting cast of child and animal characters and give energy to every spread. Though some of the references are likely to be new to the audience, the illustrations provide sufficient context to carry the meaning if not all the nuances. Immensely satisfying for young lovers of numbers and fascinating for everyone. --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Combining rhyming lines with context beneath, this counting picture book offers a summation of things that exist in the world. --Publishers Weekly With a blend of animal characters and humans who are dressed like stars, the illustrations play with the presence of light throughout the story, enforcing the idea in the book that "we're a vast constellation." The colorful, gentle illustrations are perfectly suited to the text, and the book feels very much like a bedtime read that can grow with a curious child.
--School Library Journal That Hood and Yan go from a detailed look at how our world 'adds up' to such a big-picture concept (we're all made of atoms and are all in this together) is splendid. --Seven Impossible Things Before Breakfast.