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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Shino Arihara, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 6 of 6
1. Escaping Conflict, Seeking Peace: Picture books that relate refugee stories, and their importance

This article was a presentation given at the 2012 IBBY Congress in London, first posted here and developed from a PaperTigers.org Personal View, “Caught up in Conflict: Refugee stories about and for young people“.
A bibliography with links to relevant websites is listed by title can be … Continue reading ...

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2. New on the PaperTigers website…

With September now upon us, we are continuing our focus on Music in Children’s Literature with a new Book of the Month, over on the main PaperTigers website: A Song for Cambodia by Michelle Lord and illustrated by Shino Arihara (Lee & Low, 2006):

…the painful but inspiring true story of how music literally saved the life of Arn Chorn-Pond, founder of Cambodian Living Arts, a World Education project.

An orphan of the Khmer Rouge genocide in 1975, nine-year-old Arn was sent to a children’s work camp, where he was underfed and overworked, under the constantly watchful eye of armed and threatening soldiers. When volunteers were called for to play propaganda songs, Arn, who came from a family of musicians, raised his hand. He and five other children were chosen to learn the khim, a traditional Cambodian string instrument. Arn excelled… but once he had learned to play, his teacher and all but one of his fellow students were executed…

Read the complete review

Michelle has also contributed an insightful Personal View, Music as Inspiration and Survival: a Cambodian Journey - definitely worth reading!

Also new on the website, we are delighted to present an interview with husband-and-wife team Guo Yue and Clare Farrow, authors of the powerful and moving illustrated middle-reader, Little Leap Forward (Barefoot Books, 2008). In June I blogged about its powerful stage adaptation and in the interview Yue and Clare talk about it, as well as other aspects of the book.

Little Leap Forward is based on Yue’s childhood during the Cultural Revolution in China. His father, a professional erhu (two-string violin) player, died when Yue was very young; when Yue was seven, he began receiving flute lessons from one of his father’s friends, a musician who lived in the same small courtyard; then, at the age of seventeen, he joined an army music ensemble as a flutes soloist for the People’s Republic of China. With the help of one of his sisters, Yue left China in 1982 to take up a scholarship at the Guildhall School of Music in London. He now plays all over the world - and by following some of the links in the interview side-bar, you can listen to some examples of his beautiful music…

0 Comments on New on the PaperTigers website… as of 9/2/2009 7:21:00 PM
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3. Scrapie Hemispheres

Left and right hemispheres in tandem.
Scraperboard 11cm x 4cm. Click to enlarge.

0 Comments on Scrapie Hemispheres as of 12/4/2007 5:03:00 PM
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4. Fuji Fool

Two more views of Mt.Fuji. A continuing series.
Scraperboard 8cm x 5cm. Click to enlarge.

4 Comments on Fuji Fool, last added: 12/5/2007
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5. More from Japan

Continuing my series "One Hundred Views of Mt.Fuji".
Scraperboard 11cm x 5cm. Click to enlarge.

5 Comments on More from Japan, last added: 11/29/2007
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6. Fuji two

Two views of Mt.Fuji, part of a series.
Scraperboard 7cm x 5cm. Click to enlarge.

1 Comments on Fuji two, last added: 11/26/2007
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