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THIS IS HOW WE TALK

Jessica Slice Caroline Cupp Kayla Harren

A Celebration of Disability and Connection

From the creators of This Is How We Play is a new jubilant, inclusive, luminously illustrated picture book that celebrates all the ways we communicate with each other.
We sign, write, clap! We tap, stim, scream! So many ways to talk and joke, play and learn and dream. This joyful read-aloud, with an empowering refrain, from disability rights activists Jessica Slice and Caroline Cupp, demystifies and respects how disabled people and their families use different verbal and non-verbal forms of communication.

Back matter consists of a kid-friendly guide to thinking, learning, and talking about disability and communication; a glossary of the different disabilities represented throughout the book; and a guide for grown-ups on ways to encourage discussions about disabilities with the children in their lives. Throughout, This Is How We Talk centers, affirms, and encourages the disabled children and adults who are already doing the challenging work of advocating for themselves and finding strength in community.

Jessica Slice is a writer who often writes about her experience as a mom who uses a power wheelchair. Her writing has been featured in the New York Times, Washington Post, Glamour, HuffPo, and more.

Caroline Cupp is a disabled progressive pastor in Philadelphia.

Kayla Harren is an award-winning illustrator of numerous children's books, including the Lambda Literary Award winner Calvin. She graduated from the School of Visual Arts in New York City with a BFA in illustration, and lives in Minnesota with her husband and dogs.
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Book

Published 2025-07-01 by Dial Books

Comments

In the follow-up to This Is How We Play (2024), kids and adults with physical, sensory, and developmental disabilities describe how they communicate.

This beautifully illustrated book celebrates the ways children and adults living with disabilities communicate with the world.

Disabled disability advocates Slice and Cupp explore the various ways communication happens, with emphasis on the communication experiences of disabled people.