I really wanted to like this book. I initially judged it by it's cover and thought it would be a wholesome book. But I can't in good faith give it a good review because I would never read this to my kids. The setting appears to be somewhere in NY. And I'm ok with cities. I like cities. The issue lies on what Jonathan and his mother were doing. The book is for very young readers, toddler aged. Jonathan and his mother talk a walk in their neighborhood, by some apartments, by the basketball park, by friends who are hanging around at their porch, etc. They move in different patterns, from going slow, to running, to taking steps like a ballerina, to taking reggae steps... There are only a few things I don't like about this book but it's enough to put me off from reading it or donating it to kids. For one, I was put in ballet since I was three years old. It's not something you should put your toddler boy into or try to get them into. It's not something you should expose to them like it's ok or normal. You should put them in a place where there will be other boys to play with, not a room full of girls in frilly dresses. That's my opinion. I only started seeing boy dancers start dancing when they were a lot older and had made that decision for themselves. And none of them "liked girls." Jazz Jennings was put in ballet at 3, where he immediately wanted to have the same things the girls were having and they were depriving him of: the outfits, the dances, the close girl friendships. And after his mother put him there (because he did not choose to be there) he started wanting to be like the girls.