The Year of the Monkey Series: Tales from the Chinese Zodiac (Book 11) Written by Oliver Chin Illustrated by Kenji Ono Immedium 12/15/2015 978-1-59702-118-0 36 pages Age 4—8 2016 is the Year of the Monkey. “Max is the son of the famous Monkey King and Queen, who have very high expectations. …
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Blog: Kid Lit Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Oliver Chin, 5stars, Children's Books, friendship relationships, Jianzi, Kenji Ono, shuttlecock, sposrt, The Year of the Monkey, creativity, Picture Book, Favorites, Series, Books for Boys, Chinese zodiac, teams, starting school, Immedium, Add a tag
Blog: PaperTigers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Chinese culture, Year of the Rat, Tricia Morissey, Demi, Chinese Zodiac, Happy Happy Chinese New Year!, Hiss! Pop! Boom!, Sally Rippin, Dawn Casey, Gabrielle Wang, The Race for the Chinese Zodiac, Cultures and Countries, Oliver Chin, Anne Wilson, Year of the snake, chinese new year children's books, Fang Fang's Chinese New Year, Grace Lim, Kay Haugaard, My mom is dragon and my dad is a boar, The Day the Dragon Danced, Year of the Dog, Chinese New Year, Add a tag
The Year of the Snake slithers in this weekend but have no fear! Ancient Chinese wisdom says a snake in the house is actually a good omen because it means that your family will not starve. The sixth sign of the Chinese Zodiac, the snake represents wisdom, intelligence and self-control. The snake also represents the ability to strike at will, quickly and powerfully. The Year of Snake promises to be a time of steady progress and attention to detail. Focus and discipline will be necessary for all of us to achieve what we set out to create.
Chinese New Year is the longest and most important festival in the Chinese calendar and celebrations take place around the world . What better way to get into the spirit by reading some Chinese New Year children’s books! Here are a few books we’ve blogged about that we would definitely recommend:
Tales from the Chinese Zodiac series by Oliver Chin,
The Great Race / The Story of the Chinese Zodiac by Dawn Casey, illustrated by Anne Wilson;
The Day the Dragon Danced by Kay Haugaard, illustrated by Carolyn Reed Barritt
Fang Fang’s Chinese New Year by Sally Rippin
The Race for the Chinese Zodiac by Gabrielle Wang, illustrated by Sally Heinrich
Year of the Dog and Year of the Rat by one of my favorite authors Grace Lin. Be sure to visit Grace’s blog t0 read about her plans for bringing in the New Year with her daughter Rain Dragon and to get some New Year crafts suggestions.
My Mom Is a Dragon and My Dad is a Boar and Hiss! Pop! Boom! by Tricia Morissey
Happy, Happy Chinese New Year! written and illustrated by Demi. Read our interview with Demi here and see our gallery of her stunning illustration work here.
And here’s a special kidlit New Year celebration for those of you who live in San Jose, CA, USA. Children’s author Oliver Chin will be reading from his new book The Year of the Snake: Tales from the Chinese Zodiac, on Feb. 19th at the Joyce Ellington Branch library. Details here.
Blog: PaperTigers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: M Authors, Hong Kong, M Title, Chinese Zodiac, Kam Mak, lunar year, My Chinatown, Lunar New Year, Children's Books, Picture Books, Illustrators, The Tiger's Bookshelf, Add a tag
When a writer and an illustrator blend their gifts to create a picture book, that is a very special kind of magic. When a picture book comes into being because one person has been both author and illustrator, using each of these arts with equal skill, that goes beyond magic into the realm of miracles.
Kam Mak has created one of those miracles with My Chinatown–a book that is impossible to ignore because of his glowing, colorful paintings that dominate the front and back covers and the vivid images within that he has created with his words.
A small boy scuffs through ”drifts of red paper,” ”a snowfall the color of luck,” missing Hong Kong as he faces New Year in a place that is not yet home. “So many things got left behind,” he says, “a country/a language/a grandmother,” and the simple poetry in this statement aches with loss, expressed in new words that “taste like metal in my mouth.”
The words and paintings follow him through the year as he explores his new surroundings, makes friends, finds familiar sights in a place that slowly becomes familiar as well. When the New Year comes around again, with its “lions in the street outside,” he’s eager to be nearby watching them “shaking their neon manes.”
Although this book was wonderfully reviewed by PaperTigers’ contributor Jessica Roeder when it was first published in the spring of 2002, I was so enchanted by it when I recently found it in a Bangkok library that I had to bring it home with me to write about the treasure that had come into my hands. It’s a book that addresses the joy of childhood, the pain of leaving family members when coming to a new country, the excitement of exploring the unfamiliar and making it your own place. Each page of text has its own painting, and the words combine with Mak’s masterful use of color and light to make this book unforgettable.
Anyone living near a United States post office can own a small piece of Mak’s art for the price of a postage stamp–he has designed a set of stamps that illustrate the Chinese Zodiac and are released annually, one at a time as the lunar New Year begins. Happy Year of the Ox, everyone!