Saturday, January 31, 2026

Saturday Morning Cartoons- Korobá: The Case of the Missing Kolo

Ònájìn, Àlàbá. The Case of the Missing Kolo (Korobá #1)
February 24, 2026 by Holiday House
ARC provided by Young Adult Books Central

In this graphic novel, we meet Korobá, who lives in Makoko, Nigeria with Iya, her mother, four year old brother Taju, and baby sister Pofpof, as well as their dog, Popi. As the Harvest Festival approaches, Korobá and her friends at St. Helenś Primary School investigate how much money theye gathered in their Kolo boxes, and plan their purchases of clothing and food for the festival. Korobá has decorated hers, but her friend Saidat has not. Saidat has to deal with her cousin Risi, who is visiting from the city and rather snobby about the more rough and tumble life in a fishing village. There is also a carpenter working on the floor of her house. When Saidat's Kolo box goes missing, Korobá helps to investigate. There are plenty of suspects, from Risi to the carpenter, to Mausi, a friend who has been acting suspiciously. The real test of the Kolo box's ownership is that Saidat's knows exactly how much money is in the box. Will Korobá be able to find the thief before the Harvest Festival?

An author's note mentions that Makoko is a real place, and has high levels of poverty. The graphic novel allows young readers to not only follow Korobá's exploits, but to see how different Makoko may be from their own homes. It is a fishing village, and many of the houses and buildings are on stilts above the water, and the children often travel in boats. There are lots of good details about the Harvest Festival as well.

The artwork, which will be in full color in the finished book, does a great job of capturing Korobá and her friends, from their clothing to the range of expressions on their faces. Even Popi sometimes has an adorable scowl on his face!

I'm a huge fan of reading about the lives of children in places other than the US and Canada. I have had a few students with Nigerian backgrounds, and this would be especially interesting to them. Atinuke's Too Small Tola or Anna Hibiscus also have characters of Nigerian descent, and this graphic novel will be popular with readers who like gentle mysteries like Smith's The Great Cake Mystery, Butler's Kayla and King books or Haldar's Word Travelers.

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