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Mechanics' Institute

Tarpey-Schwed LGBT Families Children's Book Special Collection

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Cover of A Tale of Two Mommies.

Cover image from Open Library.

Image source

A Tale of Two Mommies

Creator

Vanita Oelschlager; illustrated by Mike Blanc

Date

Published 2011

Format

Book

A VanitaBooks companion picture book using questions and everyday care to present a child with two mothers.

Two mothersQuestion-and-answer picture booksVanitaBooksFamily diversityCaregiving roles

Overview

A Tale of Two Mommies is a VanitaBooks picture book by Vanita Oelschlager, published as a companion to A Tale of Two Daddies. The local catalog describes a child answering another child's practical questions about life with two mothers; the answers divide everyday care between Momma and Mommy while also showing shared parental presence. The public record is strongest when the pair is read together. Library records, publisher materials, review-list evidence, and later scholarship show two closely related books using a question-and-answer form to make same-sex-parent family life legible to young readers. These records should therefore be treated as series-member pages rather than separate flagship objects. Their importance lies in format, pair structure, independent publishing, and circulation through professional LGBTQ children's-book lists.[1][3][5][6]

Companion Question-And-Answer Form

A Tale of Two Mommies belongs to a deliberately paired structure. The two books use questions from another child to let the protagonist describe everyday life with two mothers. That form matters because it anticipates questions a reader might ask without turning the family into a crisis. Each answer names ordinary care: food, fear, tools, bedtime, missing pets, or play. The book's interpretive value is therefore not only its family structure. It is the way a repeated question-and-answer pattern turns household work into evidence of parental presence.[1][2][3][5]

Ordinary Care As Representation

The local catalog emphasizes practical care rather than legal, medical, or explanatory conflict. Momma and Mommy are differentiated by tasks, temperaments, and skills, and the child describes who helps in each situation. This representational strategy is compact but revealing. It does not argue that two mothers should be accepted through abstract rights language. Instead, it presents a household organized by reliable adults and recognizable routines. That makes the pair useful beside earlier and later books where family legitimacy is established through domestic detail rather than public debate.[1][6][11]

VanitaBooks Context

VanitaBooks gives the pair a specific independent-press setting. Publisher materials describe a small Ohio press with a philanthropic model, and its catalog places the two titles among books about disability, grief, adoption, family form, and social difference. That context changes the reading of the pair. They were not issued by the early Alyson network or by a large trade publisher responding to controversy. They came from a values-driven independent press using a repeated picture-book format to address family and social questions for children.[7][6][5]

Illustration And Role Clarity

The illustrations are part of the books' teaching structure. Public records credit Mike Blanc across the companion titles, with Kristin Blackwood also credited on A Tale of Two Daddies. Blanc's own site describes a long illustration career, which helps place the books inside professional visual production rather than anonymous educational pamphlet work. The visual task is straightforward but important: children, parents, beach or household settings, and repeated adult roles must stay clear enough for young readers to follow the answer pattern.[8][2][3][6]

Timeline

  1. 2006VanitaBooks philanthropic contextPublisher materials place VanitaBooks in a charitable independent-publishing network.[7]
  2. 2010Daddies publicationPublic records place A Tale of Two Daddies in 2010.[2][5]
  3. 2010Daddies list trailALA Rainbow Books pages preserve nomination/list context for A Tale of Two Daddies.[9]
  4. 2011Mommies publicationPublic records place A Tale of Two Mommies in 2011.[3][4]
  5. 2012Mommies list trailALA Rainbow Books pages preserve nomination/list context for A Tale of Two Mommies.[10]
  6. 2013Selection debate contextALSC discussion of anti-gay books names A Tale of Two Mommies in a library-selection context.[12]
  7. 2023Catalog afterlifeVanitaBooks' later catalog continued to present the companion titles.[6]
  8. 2025Scholarly surveyA 2025 study included both titles in an LGBTQ picture-book survey.[11]

Companion Pair

The two VanitaBooks titles are strongest as a paired record.

2010

A Tale of Two Daddies

Two-father question-and-answer companion title.

2011

A Tale of Two Mommies

Two-mother question-and-answer companion title.

2023

VanitaBooks catalog

Later publisher catalog preserves the pair in the press list.

Explore Connections

Browse direct links, shared themes, and nearby publication dates.

Linked records

Companion volume

A Tale of Two Daddies

The two VanitaBooks titles share author, publisher, format, question-and-answer structure, and reception sources.

References [1][5]

Two-father lineage

Daddy's Roommate

Daddy's Roommate gives an earlier gay-father comparison for child-facing family representation.

References [14]

Two-mother lineage

Heather Has Two Mommies

Heather gives an earlier two-mother comparison point for the VanitaBooks companion pair.

References [13]

Counter-text comparison

Does God Love Michael's Two Daddies?

The religious counter-text provides a useful contrast to VanitaBooks' ordinary-care approach to same-sex-parent families.

References [12]

Shared themes

Question-and-answer picture books

A Tale of Two Daddies

A VanitaBooks companion picture book using questions and everyday care to present a child with two fathers.

Family diversity

Chag Sameach! = Happy Holidays

A Jewish holiday book illustrated with photographs of diverse families and community observances.

Two mothers

Two Moms, the Zark, and Me

An Alyson Wonderland picture book using rhyme and fantasy to address a child's anxiety about having two mothers.

Two mothers

Is Your Family Like Mine?

An early picture book in which a child with two mothers asks classmates what makes a family.

Nearby dates

Published 2011

ABCs with Keesha. My Family!

An alphabet and activity companion to the Keesha/My Family books for children of LGBTQ parents.

Published 2011

Donovan's Big Day

A two-mother wedding picture book centered on a child's ritual preparation and role as ring bearer.

Published 2011

I Love Ewe

A Lulu children's book using animal allegory to address same-sex love, prejudice, and adoption.

Published 2011

Keesha & Her Two Moms Go Swimming

A Dodi Press picture book about children with two mothers and two fathers sharing a day at the pool.

Citation

A Tale of Two Mommies. Vanita Oelschlager; illustrated by Mike Blanc. VanitaBooks, 2011. Tarpey-Schwed LGBT Families Children's Book Special Collection, Mechanics' Institute. Collection ID: KB-019.

Showing Plain text citation format.

Sources

Cover image from Open Library.

  1. Local collection catalog record for A Tale of Two Mommies · catalog
  2. Open Library work record for A Tale of Two Daddies · library
  3. Open Library ISBN record for A Tale of Two Mommies · library
  4. Boston Public Library record for A Tale of Two Mommies · library
  5. VanitaBooks titles list · publisher
  6. VanitaBooks 2023 catalog · publisher
  7. VanitaBooks about page · publisher
  8. Mike Blanc illustrator site · creator
  9. ALA Rainbow Books nomination page for A Tale of Two Daddies · ala
  10. ALA Rainbow Books nomination page for A Tale of Two Mommies · ala
  11. MDPI study of LGBTQ picture books · scholarship
  12. ALSC Blog discussion of anti-gay books and library selection · professional
  13. Open Library record for Heather Has Two Mommies · library
  14. Open Library record for Daddy's Roommate · library