
Can You Find My Eid Presents? By A.M. Dassu illustrated by Junissa Bianda

This brightly illustrated Eid book has cute illustrations, but is very basic. There is very little about Eid, in fact I have no idea if it is supposed to be Eid al Fitr or Eid al Adha. The girl is outside when it gets dark and no mention of iftar is made, but there is no crescent moon for Eid al Adha as there is one prominently seen in the illustration, so any insight into the matter would be great. The book is just a little girl running around looking for the missing Eid presents. It doesn’t talk about traditions or faith, Hana is literally just moving from location to location to look under the bed, in the wardrobe, the broom cupboard, the bathroom, the garbage, outside, in the shed. So yes, yet another Eid book with no Islam, no heart, no explaining why finding presents makes this the “best Eid ever!” Sigh. Truly it could be, Can you find my birthday presents or Christmas presents, and nothing in the story would have to change.
The book starts the evening before Eid, and Mummy and Hana are laying the table, and admiring the Eid decorations. Mummy has a lot still to do and asks Hana to help by getting the Eid presents to Nani’s house for the party. Only problem is that Hana can’t find them.
She looks everywhere, inside and out, and when Daddy comes home he is too busy to help. He shoos her off to Nani’s next door, where the mystery is solved and the next morning when the presents are opened everyone is happy.
I wish there was some emotion, maybe whatever was in the little blue box for her Nani had her excited, and when it goes missing she is anxious. Even to mention that they go open presents after Eid prayers seems like a natural inclusion, but alas, there is no emotion, no Islam, and no real point of the book.