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Reviewed by Emily-Jane Hills Orford for Readers' Favorite
Donk the donkey wants some answers. He doesn’t understand why the farmer of Donkey Farm calls all the donkeys stubborn: “Move, you stubborn donkeys! Why, oh why are you so stubborn?” Donk asks everyone and they all give him the same answer, “It’s just the way it is.” When he meets the wisest donkey of all, Jack the fairy donkey, he asks him the same question and he’s disappointed when he hears the same answer. Why won’t anyone tell Donk the real reason why donkeys are stubborn? Donk needs to know. Jack finally tells Donk and sends him back to share it with the others.
K.A. Mulenga’s picture book story, Donk and the Stubborn Donkeys, is a clever way of teaching young people about labels and the stigmas attached to these labels. With bright, colorful illustrations, the plot follows young Donk’s quest to find some answers, to understand why the farmer called all the donkeys stubborn. The inquisitive young donkey will certainly attract young readers who are all full of their own ‘why’ questions and their own quests to find out who they are and why they are the way they are. It also addresses the impact negative labels can have on an individual and it points out that one doesn’t have to (and shouldn’t) accept these labels, because that is all they are: labels. The names we’re called really don’t define who we are. A powerful message brilliantly told in a fun way that will instantly appeal to young readers.