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JacketFlap tags: Shaun Tan, Ziba Came on a Boat, Eve Bunting, Karen Lynn Williams, Khadra Mohammed, The Arrival, Holiday House, Catherine Stock, Ted Lewin, Robert Ingpen, Liz Lofthouse, Michelle Lord, Shino Arihara, Mary Hoffman, Four Feet Two Sandals, One Green Apple, John Marsden, R. Gregory Christie, IBBY Congress, Susan Guevara, Tony Johnston, Tilbury House, Jude Daly, Frances Lincoln, Playing War, Clarion Books, Shen's Books, Linda Gerdner, Sarah Langford, A Song for Cambodia, Rukhsana Khan, Matt Ottley, Home and Away, Karin Littlewood, The Colour of Home, Lea Lyon, Jeremy Brooks, Let There be Peace: Prayers from Around the World, The Island, Cinco Puntos Press, Sarah Garland, Armin Greder, Doug Chayka, Annemarie Young, Anthony Robinson, June Allan, children's books about refugees, Ronald Himmler, Pegi Deitz Shea, children's books about peace, Stuart Loughridge, Allen & Unwin, Azzi In Between, Tamarind Books, MWD article, Lee & Low (US), Grandfather's Story Cloth / Yawg Daim Paj Ntaub Dab Neeg, Eerdman's Publishing, Mohammed’s Journey: A Refugee Diary, Lothian Books, children's books about war, Voice from Afar: Poems of Peace, The Roses in My Carpets, Ben Morley, Boyd's Mill Press, Brothers in Hope: The Story of the Lost Boys of Sudan, Carl Pearce, Chue and Nhia Thao Cha, Debra Reid Jenkins, Dia Cha, Dia's Story Cloth: The Hmong People's Journey to Freedom, Frances Park & Ginger Park, Gervalie's Journey: A Refugee Diary, Joyce Herold, Kathy Beckwith, Mali Under the Night Sky: A Lao Story of Home, Mary Williams, Meltem's Journey: A Refugee Diary, My Freedom Trip, My Name is Sangoel, The Silence Seeker, The Whispering Cloth, Viking (Australia), You Yang, Youmi, Poetry, Young Adult, Anita Riggio, Picture Books, Articles, Non-Fiction, Middle-Grade, Add a tag
Blog: Happy Healthy Hip Parenting (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ira, award-winning titles, travel, new clothes for new year's day, ziba came on a boat, my cat copies me, The Zoo, Atlanta, Add a tag
If you're in Atlanta this week for the convention, please stop by and say hello. We'll be in Booth 2357.
We'll be highlighting our recent releases from Spring 2008 as well as our recent award-winning titles: Ziba Came on a Boat, The Zoo, New Clothes for New Year's Day and My Cat Copies Me.
Blog: Happy Healthy Hip Parenting (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: international, picture books, slj, australia, global, south korea, ziba came on a boat, new clothes for new year's day, usbby, my cat copies me, south korea, new clothes for new year's day, global, usbby, ziba came on a boat, my cat copies me, Add a tag
Kane/Miller is pleased to have three titles on this year's list:
Ziba Came on a Boat
Written by Liz Lofthouse
Illustrated by Robert Ingpen
From South Korea
New Clothes for New Year's Day
by Hyun-Ju Bae
My Cat Copies Me
by Yoon-Duck Kwon
Blog: AmoxCalli (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: storytelling, women, YA fiction, weaving, history and culture, Meghan Nuttall Sayres, iran, Add a tag
Anahita’s Woven Riddle
Author: Meghan Nuttall Sayres
Publisher: Amulet
ISBN-10: 0810954818
ISBN-13: 978-0810954816
Anahita is a nomad teen aged girl living in early 20th century Iran who loves riddles. She’s also just a little too independent and innovative for her time and culture which causes dissent and trouble within her tribe. One day her father tells her that the Khan, an older man who’s had three wives all of whom have died under mysterious circumstances. Anahita is horrified and has absolutely no interest in marrying this man, but her father is under pressure by the Khan.
Anahita manages to convince her father and the mullah of the tribe to allow her to have a contest in which she will weave a riddle into her wedding carpet. The man to guess the riddle will have her as his bride. This causes more trouble within the tribe as well as jealousy. Why does Anahita get to choose her husband? Why is she so willful? The angry and overbearing Khan is determined to have Anahita and threatens the tribe with one thing after another, even going so far as to block their water which they desperately need. Anahita’s contest goes on however and the suitors start trying for her hand. There are three interesting men in particular vying for Anahita’s hand in marriage – a schoolteacher, a shepherd, and a prince.
Anahita’s Woven Riddle is an incredibly beautiful story rich with Persian culture. The descriptions of Anahita’s everyday life are so detailed and colorful. You can feel yourself on those mountains and hillsides, see the carpet she is weaving, smell the sheep and feel the wind.
I’m fascinated by the art of weaving so I loved the descriptions of her traveling with a caravan into the markets and picking out dyes for the dyemaster of her tribe.
Anahita’s Woven Riddle is a completely engrossing, different and fantastic tale. Highly recommended for anyone who is interested in expanding their world, learning about the history and culture of another land or anyone who just loves a good story.