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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Minfong Ho, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 11 of 11
1. PaperTigers’ Global Voices feature with award winning author Holly Thompson (USA/Japan)~ Part 2

English-language Asia-set Children’s and YA Fiction ~ by Holly Thompson

Part 2 of 3 (read Part 1 here)

Some years back as we settled into our bicultural family life with young children here in Japan, although we were surrounded by books in Japanese and took full advantage of Japan’s healthy picture book and middle-grade market, we discovered that finding English-language reading material to support our bilingual children was no easy task. Because our children attended Japanese schools, English education happened in our home, and we needed a steady supply of English-language books. But libraries in Japan stock few English-language books, and bookstores here carry very few and at hefty mark-ups, so whenever friends or family visited from the U.S. they brought books to us. Returning from a trip back to the States, our luggage was always heavy with books. We book-swapped with families in Japan, we ordered from Scholastic with our English-after school group, and we pounced on book sale tables at international school fairs. At last, Amazon Japan with free and quick delivery of affordable overseas books came to the rescue.

Always on the lookout for books relating to our lives while raising our bilingual children, we soon became aware of a lack of English-language children’s books that reflect Japan. English-language picture books set in Japan were rare, and those that existed, we discovered, tended toward folktales and nonfiction. Where were the day-to-day stories that reflected the landscapes and people and value systems surrounding us? Where was Japan?

We treasured our Allen Say books, especially Kamishibai Man and Grandfather’s Journey.

We read and reread the bilingual Grandpa’s Town by Takaaki Nomura. We enjoyed folktale retellings like The Seven Gods of Luck by David Kudler and Yoshi’s Feast by Kimiko Kajikawa. and biographical works like Cool Melons—Turn to Frogs by Matthew Gollub. All excellent, but we were discouraged that such English-language titles set in Japan were few and far between.

Searching for other Asian cultures in English-language picture books yielded similar results—folktales, nonfiction and concept books, but few fictional stories set in Asia.

As the children grew older, we came to realize that even less common than English-language picture books set in Asia were English-language middle-grade and YA novels set in Japan and Asia. What we found was mostly historical fiction. Of course we read and loved Korea-set historical novels by Linda Sue Park, Japan-set novels by 0 Comments on PaperTigers’ Global Voices feature with award winning author Holly Thompson (USA/Japan)~ Part 2 as of 5/23/2012 10:49:00 AM

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2. An unusual lullaby…

Thank you, Readertotz, for highlighting this gorgeous video of one of my favorite singers, Andrea Boccelli, singing Sesame Street’s Elmo to sleep with a variation on one of his most well-known songs - very sweet and funny at the same time!

It also made me think of all those picture books where the baby just won’t go to sleep - like Hush! A Thai Lullaby by Minfong Ho, illustrated by Holly Meade (Orchard Books, 2000).

0 Comments on An unusual lullaby… as of 9/13/2009 8:47:00 PM
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3. The Tiger’s Bookshelf: A New Incarnation

We have deeply enjoyed hosting the Tiger’s Choice, the PaperTigers’ online bookgroup, over the past year–it introduced us to a number of interesting books, a group of authors whom we hadn’t read before, and a collection of new friends from around the globe who joined in our discussions.

Nancy Farmer, Uma Krishnaswami, Ken Mochizuki, Minfong Ho, Jane Vejjajiva, Julia Alvarez, John Boyne,  Katia Novet Saint-Lot are all authors whom we plan to return to again and again for reading that expands our cultural horizons. As their body of work increases, the Tiger’s Bookshelf will be there–to read, to praise, to cheer them on.

We will however be doing this in another form rather than through the Tiger’s Choice. As exciting and rewarding as it has been to explore books through this avenue, we have new plans for the Tiger’s Bookshelf that do not include our bookgroup. We thank all of you who have read this portion of our blog, and who have joined in the discussions, and hope that you will continue to be part of the ongoing conversation that will take place on the PaperTigers Blog, and through the Tiger’s Bookshelf!

0 Comments on The Tiger’s Bookshelf: A New Incarnation as of 12/3/2008 12:46:00 AM
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4. The Tiger’s Choice: Revisiting The Clay Marble

The Clay Marble

Eleven years ago I made my first visit to Cambodia and fell in love. I was in Phnom Penh, which in 1997 was a city of hope, and the mood of joyous optimism that pervaded its streets was irresistible. The man who was my motorcycle taxi driver during my visit was a man whose smile touched his eyes but did not erase the omnipresent sadness that lived in them. His parents had been killed during the years of Pol Pot when he was just entering his teens, and he refused to accompany me when I entered the grounds of Tuol Sleng, the school that had been turned into a torture chamber , because that is the place that had made him an orphan. He took care of his younger brother as best as he could and they both survived.

He took me to his house in the rural outskirts of the city so I could meet his wife, his two small sons, and his baby daughter. His children all gleamed with the love that he gave them, healthy and happy. At one point during my time with them, my host tapped the side of a large and bulging burlap bag. “Rice,” he said proudly, “We eat it every day.”

When I read and reread The Clay Marble, it brings this memory so strongly to mind that I often find that I am in tears. Minfong Ho evokes the hunger of that dreadful time–for food, for family, for community, for the ability to know that a harvest of rice will soon be reaped, for the safety to sleep in one’s own house with safe and happy children close by.

Obviously I have emotional baggage that I bring with me to this book–would it have the same impact if I had not fallen in love with Cambodia? What about you? Does this book move you or is does it feel contrived? Is it an issue in search of a story or does it bring the refugee experience to life? Please let us all know what you think…

0 Comments on The Tiger’s Choice: Revisiting The Clay Marble as of 7/29/2008 3:01:00 PM
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5. The Tiger’s Choice: The Clay Marble

The Clay Marble Fleeing the horror that has turned her home in Cambodia into a battleground filled with death and starvation, twelve-year-old Dara and what is left of her family cross the border into neighboring Thailand and the safety of Nong Chan, a camp for Cambodian refugees. Quickly they become absorbed into the life of “a vast barren field teeming with refugees” which “had the feel of our village during the years of peace before the fighting started.”
This is a place with enough food for all, where Dara’s family joins forces with the family of Jantu, a girl who becomes Dara’s friend. Jantu has the gift of magic hands; she is able to turn clay and leftover scraps into toys and she makes Dara a clay marble that contains the magic and power that are badly needed in these troubled times. Even more magical and powerful are the bags of rice seeds that are given to the refugees and carry the promise of future crops in their abandoned fields in Cambodia. Dara and Jantu’s families dream of feeding themselves once again in Cambodia, but even in the safety of the refugee camp, war interferes brutally with their plans.
Written by Minfong Ho, who worked as a volunteer in refugee camps along the Thai-Cambodian border in 1980, this book has become a classic since it appeared in 1991. Dara and Jantu, with their determination and courage, are characters who reach beyond borders and age barriers to show readers what it means to become refugees and how hope can bring people back to their homes. Please join us in reading and discussing The Clay Marble in July.

0 Comments on The Tiger’s Choice: The Clay Marble as of 7/9/2008 2:11:00 PM
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6. The Big Read II: I, Claudius -- Robert GravesChapters 7-10

I_claudiusChapter Seven -- Love and Marriage, Love and Marriage

• Urgulanilla.  Yow.  Translation?  Diminutive of... something, right?  I should really learn this stuff.

• Oh, my.  What an attractive description of marriage.  That paragraph had a different tone and pacing -- rather than Claudius telling me about the ladies, I could see and hear the ladies themselves (well, a caricature of them) philosophizing to each other about their reasons for not marrying. 

Zeeney from The Long Secret came to mind, oddly.  (Even though she was married.  It was more her personality -- consciously, carefully languid, deliberately world-weary.)  I pictured Zeeney and an amalgam of characters Joanna Lumley has played.  Anyway.

• "Knights, if they married at all, married for rich dowries, not for children or for love, and a freedwoman was not much of a catch; and besides knights, especially those recently raised to the order, had strong feelings about marrying beneath them."  So that stereotype about people with New Money being more actively snobby than people with Old Money is a pretty old one, huh?

• "As time went on suitable candidates for priesthood were increasingly difficult to find."  Yeah, I'll bet.

• "...but as you will soon see it did not trouble her for long..."  Uh oh.

• I WANT TO KICK AUGUSTUS.  I spluttered all the way through his conversation with Medullinus.  Somehow, I'm not feeling very hopeful about the outcome of this love-match -- it would just be too nice of a thing for Claudius to marry someone he loved and who loved him back.  And, of course, there was that mention of Urgulanilla at the beginning of the chapter.

• "...there would be no feast, merely the usual ritual sacrifice of a ram whose entrails would then be examined to see whether the auspices were favourable.  Of course they would be; Augustus, officiating as priest, in compliment to Livia, would see to that."

• Yep.  Now I'm feeling the hate towards Livia.  I really liked poor Camilla, even though I only knew her for about a page and a half.

• Postumus, in love with Lavilla?  He seemed so much brighter than that.

A Pillow Debate on Force and Gentleness is just hilarious:

Livia answers:  "You are quite right and I have a piece of advice to give you--that is, if you are willing to accept it and will not blame me for daring, though a woman, to suggest to you something which nobody else, even of your most intimate friends, would dare to suggest."

...

But in the case of the rest, whose errors, committed wilfully or otherwise, are due to youth or ignorance or misapprehension, we should, I believe, merely rebuke them, or punish them in the mildest possible way.

Ha.  Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.  Beastly woman.  (Yes, I'm still mad about Camilla.)

Chapter Eight -- In which we meet Urgulanilla and her mother.

• The Livia/Urgulania plan is rather brilliant, but so very eeeevil.  (I wouldn't have called it evil if it were just a means to an end, but they're getting a kick out of it too:  "The two got a great deal of amusement out of this game and Livia plenty of useful information and assistance in her plans.")

• "Later, I shall tell how once, when summoned by a senator to whom she owed a large sum of money to appear before the magistrates in the Debtors' Court, she refused to obey the summons; and how, to avoid the scandal, Livia paid up."  Well, thanks, Claudius.  I'll be looking forward to you telling that story.  ("Later, after the next two commas, I shall tell how once, ...")  Sheesh!  Did Robert Graves giggle when he wrote sentences like that?  I hope so.  I've been giggling as I read them.

• It would be nice to see Claudius and Urgulanilla team up like in Freak the Mighty and take out Livia and Urgulania, but somehow I don't think it's likely to happen.

Chapter Nine -- In which our young historian talks with two old historians and is given a piece of advice.

• "I see now, though I hadn't considered the matter before, that there are two different ways of writing history:  one is to persuade men to virtue and the other is to compel men to truth.  The first is Livy's way and the other is yours: and perhaps they are not irreconcilable."

• Here's the advice:

"Now listen!  Do you want to live a long busy life, with honour at the end of it?"

"Yes."

"Then exaggerate your limp, stammer deliberately, sham sickness frequently, let your wits wander, jerk your head and twitch with your hands on all public or semi-public occasions."

Pollio also tells him that both his grandfather and father were poisoned, but no names are named.

Chapter Ten -- In which we are treated to some of Livia and Augustus' private correspondence and Postumus flirts with death.

• Livia on Postumus:

I consider that Death has been extremely unkind to take off his two talented brothers and leave us only with him.

Watch your step, Postumus!  Also, didn't Livia orchestrate the downfall of his "two talented brothers"?

• Part of me feels insulted by Livia's condescension and dismissal of Claudius, but mostly I'm just glad she doesn't see his as a threat.  Augustus surprised me a few times here, so much so that I didn't even feel like kicking him.

See?  Postumus is practically ASKING to be bumped off:

"Soon he is reprimanded by Livia for his changed manner and for his surliness towards her.  "What's poisoned you?" she asks.  He replies, grinning, "Maybe you've been putting something in my soup."

Now I'm afraid to read Chapter Eleven.

Previous posts:

Reading schedule
Chapters 1-3
Chapters 4-6

Other reader/bloggers:

Becky's Online Reading Group
There's always time for a book
Garish & Tweed

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7. The Big Read II: I, Claudius -- Robert GravesChapters 4-6

Don't forget to let me know if you're posting as you read!

Chapter Four:  In which we learn about the circumstances behind Claudius' father's death.

• Back at the beginning of Chapter Two, there was a bit that suggested Livia had an issue (to put it mildly) with Claudius' father -- her own youngest son.  Now we know why:

By ill-luck the letter was delivered to Tiberius while he was in the presence of Augustus and Livia.  "A despatch from your noble brother!" the Imperial courier called out, handing it to him.  Tiberius, not suspecting that there was anything in the letter that should not be communicated to Livia and Augustus, asked permission to open and read it at once.  Augustus said: "By all means, Tiberius, but on condition that you read it aloud to us."

I_claudiusSeriously, I literally clutched my chest and said, "Nooooooooooo!"  (It's a good thing I've been reading this when Josh is out of the house.)  Then I thought, "Well, he's dead."

And he was!  No kind huntsman* for poor Drusus.  Instead, he gets a physician sent by his loving (hah!) mother who lets him die of gangrene or maybe poison (or hell, maybe both).

• I know the Very Private Letter That is Read Aloud to Exactly the Wrong People device has been used in lots of other things, but I can't think of any at the moment.  It makes me cringe every time -- it's always so painful because as the reader, I usually know what's coming and that just makes it all the worse.

• I've got to say, I want to kick Augustus.  Livia, I can respect.  She's conniving and manipulative and scary, but she's also strong-willed, very smart and very tough.  Augustus just lets himself be bossed.  Is Tiberius really the only person who suspects Livia of being a poisoner?  Everyone who ticks her off ends up sick or dying!  Eating dinner with her must have been nerve-wracking.

• "Claudius, you tedious old fellow..."  I love him. 

*I don't know why I thought of Snow White.  Because he was in Germany?

Chapter Five:  In which Claudius finally shows up in his own autobiography and we learn about his early years. 

• "My grandmother Livia made him do this to please Augustus, I may say.  Tiberius was not religious-minded and very stingy with money."  His little asides are hilarious, and the build-ups to them -- in this case, about what the temple had been before and the changes that had been made -- are so well done.

• "Well, I must be thankful, I suppose, that I have never had the strangury."  This made me laugh so much that I snorted.  Again with the build-up.

• Claudius' sister Lavilla sounds like a real peach.  Not.

• In another voice, this early history could be full of self-pity -- in Claudius', it sounds like he's smirking at everyone.  There's pain, for sure, and anger, but the humor balances it out, and then some.

• I will not be pleased if something bad happens to Athenodorus.

Nelson_muntz• More beastly Lavilla:

She interrupted, laughing noisily:  "Wretched Rome, with him as her protector!  I hope to God I'll be dead before then!"

The Auger turned on her and pointed with his finger.  "Impudent girl," he said, "God will no doubt grant your wish in a way that you won't like!"

Couldn't you hear a thunderclap there?  I could.  That and Nelson Muntz.

• "He was always boasting of his ancestors, as stupid people do who are aware that they have done nothing themselves to boast about."  Nice.

• I love it when an author can make history so human:

Triumphs, besides, are very bad for military discipline.  Soldiers get drunk and out of hand and usually finish the day by breaking up the wine-shops and setting fire to the oil-shops and insulting the women and generally behaving as if Rome were the city they had conquered, not some miserable log-hut encampment in Germany or sand-burrowed village in Morocco.

I mean, obviously history is human, but I don't think it's an easy thing to make it feel that way.  You think?

• He made me laugh out loud again with the stories of Cato and the thunderstorm and about Cato and Postumus.  But now I'm all worried about Postumus.  Practically every time Livia takes an interest in someone, they end up dead.

• Claudius, rather than dismissing Sulpicius as useless, made use of his talent -- seems like that's a character trait that will serve him well.

Chapter Six:  Which is a showcase of Livia's Amazing Manipulation Skills.

• I go back and forth between thinking Livia is horrible (killing off Drusus) and awesome (her handling of Augustus and everyone else she comes into contact with).  She's such a fantastic character.  And she has a spy-system!

• This bit starts out so very soap-opera-y, but then takes quite the turn:

"Julia decided to forget that she had ever loved Tiberius.  She had suffered much from him.  Not only did he treat her with the greatest contempt whenever they were alone together, but he had begun cautiously experimenting in those ludicrously filthy practices which later made his name so detestable to all decent-minded people; and she had found out about it."

First sentence:  Right hand to forehead, swoon.  Second sentence:  Left hand to forehead, swoon.  Third sentence:  Uhhhh... yikes.

• "What Livia very cruelly gave her was a distillation of the crushed bodies of certain little green flies from Spain, which so stimulated her sexual appetite that she became like a demented woman."  Oh.  My.  God.

• "She did a good piece of business on the side, too, by singling out for special mention as Julia's partners in adultery three of four men whom it was to her interest to ruin."  The woman is AMAZING.  No opportunity wasted.

• "But somehow he was given the wrong medical treatment, and his health, which from no apparent cause had been failing him for the last two years, became seriously affected: he lost all power of mental concentration."  HAH!  Somehow.  From no apparent cause.  I say again, HAH!

Previous posts:

Reading schedule
Chapters 1-3

Other reader/bloggers:

Becky's Online Reading Group
There's always time for a book
Adventures in Multiplicity
Garish & Tweed

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8. Get ready, get set...

...and on Monday, GO!

Don't forget:  The Big Read II begins on Monday.

My copy of I, Claudius has been staring at me for weeks.

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9. Get ready, get set...

...and on Monday, GO!

Don't forget:  The Big Read II begins on Monday.

My copy of I, Claudius has been staring at me for weeks.

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10. The Big Read II: I, Claudius

You want it, you got it -- we'll be reading I, Claudius for The Big Read II.  Nothing like a little court intrigue for late winter.

I_claudius_2My reading schedule is:

March 3 -- Chapters 1-3
March 5 -- Chapters 4-6
March 7 -- Chapters 7-10
March 10 -- Chapters 11-13
March 12 -- Chapters 14-16
March 14 -- Chapters 17-19
March 17 -- Chapters 20-22
March 19 -- Chapters 23-26
March 21 -- Chapters 27-29
March 24 -- Chapters 30-34

So, get your copies ready -- you've got almost two weeks to find one.  If you're totally anti reading this book, there's always next time.  And definitely feel free to email me suggestions or leave them in the comments. 

If you don't know how this works*, take a look at my intro to the first Big Read.

*Basically, it works however you want it to work.

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11. The Big Read II: I, Claudius

You want it, you got it -- we'll be reading I, Claudius for The Big Read II.  Nothing like a little court intrigue for late winter.

I_claudius_2My reading schedule is:

March 3 -- Chapters 1-3
March 5 -- Chapters 4-6
March 7 -- Chapters 7-10
March 10 -- Chapters 11-13
March 12 -- Chapters 14-16
March 14 -- Chapters 17-19
March 17 -- Chapters 20-22
March 19 -- Chapters 23-26
March 21 -- Chapters 27-29
March 24 -- Chapters 30-34

So, get your copies ready -- you've got almost two weeks to find one.  If you're totally anti reading this book, there's always next time.  And definitely feel free to email me suggestions or leave them in the comments. 

If you don't know how this works*, take a look at my intro to the first Big Read.

*Basically, it works however you want it to work.

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