Tween actress Mia Armstrong celebrates her fun, funny, beautiful childhood living with Down syndrome in this debut picture book - adapted for audio. Mia likes many of the things other people like--going to the beach, the color blue, drawing. But she doesn't like when strangers stare at her because she looks different from them.
Down syndrome allows Mia to see and understand the world in a way that may not make sense to others. She considers it her superpower--and instead of it making her strange, she considers herself a masterpiece. As we all are.
In this spirited audiobook, Mia offers a glimpse into the life of a child with Down syndrome, helping some readers see themselves in a book and helping others understand those friends, classmates, and family members who are neurodivergent.
Mia Armstrong is a SAG-AFTRA actress, model, and voiceover artist who once declared in a
Good Morning America interview that Down syndrome is her superpower--and she’s proving that to be true.
Mia will star in her first feature film,
Christmas in New Hope, which hits streamers this Christmas. She has also starred in the Apple TV show
Hello Jack,
Muppet Babies, and Disney’s YouTube series
The Disney Princess Club. In her modeling work, Mia has appeared in ads for Tommy Hilfiger, Walmart, Target, Amazon, Walgreens, Samsung, Cheerios, Chase, and Nickelodeon. She made history as the first child with Down syndrome to voice a cartoon character on Netflix. Mia has appeared on
The View, MSNBC, and
The Tamron Hall Show.
Mia is changing the way intellectual disabilities and differences are perceived as she fights
for inclusion and
against discrimination. Mia is a prolific artist who draws and paints daily, and her art has inspired Owtside The Box, an apparel company featuring the art of individuals with Down syndrome. Mia lives in California with her parents and brother. This is her first book.
"A
celebration of self-advocacy, self-expression, and self-acceptance." —
Kirkus Reviews
"Thompson’s delicate pencil and gouache renderings amplify the emotion that infuses the text’s vision of external
patience and self-love."
—Publishers Weekly
"
A touching and unique story about accepting oneself and others." —
School Library Journal