Kevin & Robin Books
- Quality Reading for Children
Children's
Bookwatch: April 2008
James A. Cox, Editor-in-Chief
Diane C. Donovan, Editor
Midwest Book Review
278
The
Picturebook Shelf
To
Share One Moon
Ruowen Wang, author
Wei Xu & Xiaoyan Zheng, illustrators
Kevin & Robin Books Ltd.
64 Clancy Dr. Toronto, M2J 2V8, ON Canada
9780973879957, $22.95 www.kevinandrobinbooks.com
Seen through the eyes of a Chinese-Canadian young girl, To Share One
Moon is a children's picturebook about the Chinese Moon Festival, a holiday
similar to Thanksgiving in North America, when celebrating families get
together to admire the full moon while eating sweet moon cakes and enjoying
good tea. Under the full moon, friends keep in contact, families are reunited,
and separated loved ones reconnect. and absent loved ones are fondly
remembered. The joyful illustrations portray the happy moments of the holiday
through a child's eyes, as well as her sadness over the legend behind the
Chinese Moon Festival, in which the Moon Lady is tragically separated from her
husband. "Under the bright Mid-Autumn moon, I make three wishes and
believe they will be granted: I wish that this full moon has the magic power to
hold families together. I wish that the Moon Lady will eventually return to her
husband, who is still awaiting her on earth. And I wish that all loved ones, no
matter where they are, will look up at this full moon tonight and think of each
other with a tender heart."
Are You Thinking What I'm Thinking?
Ruowen Wang, author; Wei Xu, illustrator
Kevin & Robin Books
344 Jarvis Street, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada M4Y 2G6
0973879807
$19.95 Cdn
www.kevinandrobin.com
Canadian English as A Second Language teacher Ruowen Wang and award-winning Chinese artist Wei Xu present Are You Thinking What I'm Thinking?, a picturebook that uses a repetitive sentence-structure motif to help young readers build their vocabulary and word skills. A young daughter and her loving mother play a simple game together: "'Are you thinking of having a pretty dress?' / 'No. Try again.' // 'Are you thinking of having some ice cream?' / 'No. Try again.' // 'Are you thinking of picking up some groceries for dinner?' / 'No. Try again." The final paragraph spoken by the mother is especially soulful: "'Well a little bird tells me that you are unique, just like your fingerprints, and you are mine. I love you very much. And I'm thinking of painting my rainbows of love into your dreams. Shhhhhh, keep it a secret. Nighty night." Warmly illustrated with expressive colors against minimal backgrounds, Are You Thinking What I'm Thinking? is a wonderful read-aloud book for mothers and daughters everywhere.
– by The Midwest Book Review
(February, 2007)
Annotations:
Reviews:
Subjects:
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Ennie Meenie Minie Moe.
Kevin & Robin Books
(www.kevinandrobinbooks.com), 2007.
32 pp., cloth, $23.95.
ISBN 978-0-9738798-4-1
Preschool-grade 5 / Ages
4-10.
Review by Laura Ludtke.
*** /4
<i>Eenie Meenie Minie
Moe</i> is the brilliantly crafted story about an uncle telling his
favourite niece a traditional Chinese story with a hidden lesson about her own
life.
“ ‘Here we go! Once upon a time … No, that sounds boring,
doesn’t it? How would you like to listen to my improved English for a change?’
Uncle came from
With his Chinese-accented
English, Uncle starts again. ‘Here is a better version, in English: Mini, mini,
money-mole …’
He makes me laugh. ‘No,
Uncle. It is not ‘Mini, mini, money-mole.’’
‘It is not ‘a little
money-mole’? What is it then? That was what you taught me, wasn’t it?’
‘No. It should be ‘Eenie,
Meenie, Minie, Moe.’ Now, listen carefully. Eenie, Meenie, Minie, Moe. Catch a tiger by its toe. If it hollers, let
it go. Eenie, Meenie, Minie, Moe! Got it? But I thought you were going to tell
me a Chinese story.’
‘This story I’m going to tell
you is [bold]very[end bold] Chinese. Just sit up there and listen.’”
So begins the story of ‘The
Three Monks’, in which three normally solitary monks learn to live together and
cooperate in a small temple on a far away mountain top. The Uncle’s story uses
the technique of repetition to develop the monks’ lives. Each monk arrives
thirsty and tired at the
temple. The first monk finds
the temple abandoned except for a small mouse (his only companion) and fetches
water from the lake at the bottom of the mountain by himself to fill a big
ceramic jar. When the second monk arrives, the first monk is so glad to have
company that he shares water from the ceramic jar with his new companion. The
second monk repays his kindness by fetching more water from the lake below.
Eventually, the two monks work out an arrangement to fetch water together.
“Eenie, Meenie, Minie, Moe.
Catch Robin by her toe. If she screams, don’t let her go. Eenie, Meenie, Minie,
Moe.”
I protest. “Hey, why me? What
have I done?”
“Well, the problem is not
what you have done, but you have [boldnot done[end bold].” My uncle lifts me
off the tree. “Come on, young lady. Let me show you your bedroom, and then you
tell me what the problem is.”
Robin shares her bedroom with
her brother, and like the three monks living together, instead of cooperating,
they each refuse to do more than the other, and so the room is total mess! With
the help of their uncle and his stories, Robin and her brother are able to
learn that duty (cleaning one’s room) and cooperation
(cleaning the room together) can be fun and fulfilling.
Laura Ludtke is a candidate for a Masters of Classics at Queen’s University. She reads and review Children’s (and Young Adult) literature in her spare time; she is always a fan stories within stories!
* * *
Little Wen: “What is the Chinese Saying for This One?”
Kevin & Robin Books
(www.kevinandrobinbooks.com), 2007.
32 pp., cloth, $22.95.
ISBN 978-0-9738799-3-3.
Kindergarten-grade 5 / Ages 5-10.
Review by Huai-Yang Lim.
*** /4
excerpt
Wen was anything but well-mannered and cultured. She roamed the streets and climbed
trees. Once, Mama told her that only
mischievous boys climbed like monkeys.
“Girls should not climb,” she said.
“Why not?”
“People say if a girl climbs trees, her babies will be born with six
toes.”
Wen liked that idea. “That’s good. My baby girls will climb faster.”
For more information about the author, readers can visit her website at
http://www.ruowenwang.com/.
Annotations:
Reviews:
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Reviews:
Rachelle Gooden
(Resource Links, October 2007 (Vol. 13, No. 1))
The Hidden Treasure
is a story within a story. When his grandchildren ask him to tell them
a story, Grandpa takes a break from his gardening to tell them the tale
of the Hidden Treasure. This Chinese tale is about a dying old man
whose greedy children only take care of him because of a treasure they
believe he has hidden away. Wang cleverly brings the reader back into
the main frame of her book by having the grandfather ask his
grandchildren to write their own versions to the end of the tale.
Ultimately both stories work together to show that the real treasure in
life is the love of family. While the old man in the inner story longed
for it, the grandfather in the outer story treasured it. Over all this
is an entertaining, enriching, well illustrated book that is sure to
please its readers. Category: Picture Books. Thematic Links: Family;
Treasure; Chinese Stories. Resource Links Rating: G (Good, great at
times, generally useful!), Gr. 2-4. 2007, Kevin & Robin Books, 40p.
Illus., Hdbk. $22.95. Ages 7 to 10.
Little Joy.
Toronto, ON: Kevin
& Robin Books, 2008.
24 pp., hardcover,
$19.95.
ISBN
978-0-9738799-7-1.
Preschool-grade 1
/ Ages 2-6.
Review by
Huai-Yang Lim.
*** /4
Reviewed from
f&g’s.
excerpt
Mommy tickles
Little Joy on her ear.
Little Joy smiles,
but does not laugh.
Mommy tickles
Little Joy’s hair.
Little Joy smiles,
but does not laugh.
There is an
expanding body of children’s picture books that deal with adoption, a topic
which is particularly salient as more North American families today are
adopting children from Asia. These books often address this topic from the
perspective of the foster parent, sibling, or adoptee and explore the issues
that surround the process of adoption or of growing up as an adopted child. For
example, these include the family’s varied and fluctuating emotions that result
from the adopted child’s arrival, the difficulties that arise from adopted
children’s perceptions of their physical differences from other family members
and people, as well as the struggles and rewarding efforts of adopted children
to fit into their new family. Picture books that focus on adopted children from
Asia include Deborah Hodge’s <i>Emma’s Story</i>, Eve Bunting’s <i>Jin
Woo</i>, Jean Davies Okimoto’s <i>The White Swan Express</i>,
Ed Young’s <i>My Mei Mei</i>, Patricia I. McMahon’s <i>Just
Add One Chinese Sister</i>, and Stephan Molnar-Fenton’s <i>An Mei's
Strange and Wondrous Journey</i>, and Jan Czech’s </i>An American
Face</i>.
Ruowen Wang’s
story <i>Little Joy</i> is ideal for members of a younger audience
who are just beginning to develop their English comprehension skills.
Structured as a simple story told in simple language, Ruowen Wang’s book
depicts the developing bond between a white mother and her adopted Chinese
girl, Little Joy. This is not to discount the difficulties that adoptees have
when they grow up or the desires that they have to locate their birth parents,
which books, such as Ting-xing Ye’s <i>Throwaway Daughter</i>,
sensitively depict. Instead, Wang’s story depicts the relationship between a
foster mother and her child in a way that young children can comprehend and
that new parents of adopted children can also appreciate and enjoy.
The story is
charming in its evocation of a mother’s interaction with and love for her
adopted baby. Emphasizing the reciprocity and universality of love, the book
works well as an early reader or as a read-aloud for young children under the
age of five due to its repetition of phrases and simple vocabulary. It is a
straightforward narrative that is divided into two main parts: the first
portion focuses on the unsuccessful attempts of Little Joy’s mother to make her
laugh while the second part reverses the situation and shows Little Joy’s
attempts to make her mother laugh.
Teachers can read the book aloud to develop children’s language
acquisition skills while librarians could use it as a read-aloud in a public
library’s programming for young children and could encourage children’s
participation by asking them to finish the phrases.
The picture book’s
watercolour illustrations by Wei Xu complement the story effectively by
conveying a suitably gentle and lyrical mood to accompany the text. Wei Xu
creates a homely atmosphere with little details in the foreground and
background such as house plants, toys, a portrait hanging on the wall, and
Little Joy’s baby bottle. Wei Xu’s varied and plentiful usage of colour in the
pictures will keep the attention of young readers, but the pictures are
appropriately subdued with Xu’s avoidance of flashy colours and use of gentle
black and coloured outlines. Close-up shots of Little Joy evoke her cuteness,
and these complement the images in which her mother is hugging and playing with
her. A particularly striking image is the one that shows Little Joy’s mother
holding Joy’s hand while tickling her child with her other hand. There are also
a couple of outside scenes on the beach and in the neighbourhood that round out
the story’s atmosphere.
Mother-daughter
relationships are prominent in Ruowen Wang’s other published work, including
<i>Little Wen</i> and <i>Are You Thinking What I’m
Thinking?</i>, both of which Wei Xu also illustrated. Readers may
recognize this story’s illustrative style and colouring from previous picture
books that Xu illustrated, but she has suitably modified her style to suit this
story’s realism.
For more
information about Ruowen Wang, readers can visit her official site
(http://www.ruowenwang.com/) or the website of her publisher, Kevin & Robin
Books (http://www.kevinandrobinbooks.com/).
Recommended.
Huai-Yang Lim has a degree in Library and Information Studies and currently works as a researcher. He enjoys reading, reviewing, and writing children’s literature in his spare time.
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