Hooray! The April Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books has lots of good stuff to say about Can I See Your I.D.? True Stories of False Identities, such as:

The author takes on a suspenseful, energized second-person style and focuses most accounts on a key high-risk moment … The offbeat, intriguing topic, breezy, accessible style, and compact chapters will sell this to reluctant readers and wide-ranging nonfiction fans alike, and it’d be a gem of a readaloud.

In addition, the reviewer liked the “thoughtful, personable afterword,” also written in second-person. Which I guess would make it second-personable…