Vail would describe herself more as the grumblesquinchy type, not having thrown any tantrums growing up. She would feel anger, but held it in because she didn’t want to upset others. “But at some point you have to cope with your feelings, you have to think about it, you have to explore, ‘why am I feeling this way?’ And you don’t have to only be a pleasure all the time. I was a kid who enjoyed being a pleasure and I love when my kids are a pleasure. I love when they’re feeling happy and generous and kind, but that’s not their job to just be a pleasure for me… they’re not only entitled to happy and kind and generosity of spirit.”
The illustrations in Sometimes I Grumblesquinch also give readers a true sense of Katie’s range of emotions as the story progresses. “…there was something about Hyewon Yum’s art that just spoke to me that I thought was so tender, and expressive, and beautiful all at the same time, so I had a preference for her, and luckily enough she said yes…I feel like I’m going to give you the text and I hope that as an artist, the artist will find something in it, and bring something to that, and she just brought her own artistry to this family and to this story and came up with this visual vocabulary that I think is quite brilliant.”
The idea that it’s still ok, you’re still ok, you’re still a valued person, even if you’re feeling annoyed, even if you’re feeling frustrated.
Each of us has so many feelings. Not all of them are pleasant. We are all, every one of us, entitled to the full buffet of human emotions.
Still, in the end, the warm blanket of her mom’s hug tells us that it is ok to express how we really feel. We are still loved.
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