Just Leave Me Alone

Clarion Rating: 2 out of 5

Children need independence in order to grow up with healthy self-esteem and good decision-making abilities. Parents who smother their children with overly strict rules and arbitrary punishments, who do things for them that the children could do on their own, who dismiss their children’s desire for autonomy and individual identity are doing them a grave disservice.

Just Leave Me Alone depicts an anthropomorphic family of mice with an overbearing mother and a boy who craves independence. The drawings by Irene Olds portray the mice with charming big ears, mops of hair, and long, expressive tails.

The story is told as a message from the boy to his mother, explaining how he feels about her smothering treatment of him. “You always say no to everything. You taught me the difference between right and wrong. Now you need to trust me.” He asks her to let him pack his own lunch, to explain why he is punished, to allow him some privacy, and not to kiss him in front of his friends.

While stating his case, the boy is careful of his mother’s feelings, acknowledging that it might be hard for her to hear his statements, and that he knows that her behavior arises out of her love for him.

This is Nakesha Lowe’s second book; her first, It’s All About Me, is about dealing with the arrival of a new baby. In this new volume, she draws on her experience as a child of a domineering mother, and as a mother who is sometimes too strict with her own children. The book is written for kids, but the message is aimed at parents, warning them that denying children independence can hurt the children and damage the parent-child relationship.

Although Lowe writes in an authentic voice, using words that sound like they could really come from a child, her attempts at rhymes are inconsistent and feel awkward.

The book’s largest flaw is that it has no resolution. The boy mouse expresses his feelings to his mother and makes his requests, but the reader never sees what happens next. It would have been very helpful if Lowe had portrayed the mother’s response, and allowed readers the satisfaction of knowing whether the mother understands the boy’s frustrations and makes an effort to give her son the independence he needs. Such closure would have been encouraging to children who are contemplating such a conversation with their parents, and would have illustrated for adults the positive benefits that can come from such an approach to parenting.

Just Leave Me Alone offers an important message to families.

Reviewed by Karen McCarthy

Disclosure: This article is not an endorsement, but a review. The publisher of this book provided free copies of the book and paid a small fee to have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. Foreword Reviews and Clarion Reviews make no guarantee that the publisher will receive a positive review. Foreword Magazine, Inc. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.

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