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2024 Build Your Library Reading Challenge
Showing posts with label Linda Sue Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linda Sue Park. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 08, 2020
Unique MG Historical Eye-Opening and Important
6:22 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
With a white father and a Chinese/Korean mother, 14-year-old Hanna has always been different, never quite fitting in among Asians or Caucasians. She's never stuck out quite as much anywhere as she does in her new town of La Forge in Dakota Territory, though. Although Hanna tries to show people that she's kind and hard-working, a person just like anyone else, the townspeople can't see past her mixed ethnicity. When she walks down the street, they stare and whisper. When she's finally allowed to enroll in school, parents withdraw their children. When she tries to make friends, she's rebuffed. All Hanna wants is to become a successful dressmaker like her mother. Along the way, though, she's desperate to find just one person to be her confidante, one who will accept her for who she is instead of how she looks. Can Hanna achieve her dreams in a place as unfriendly as La Forge? Or will she and her father be forced to move on once again?
Little House on the Prairie was one of my absolute favorite book series growing up. Laura Ingalls Wilder's descriptions of frontier life were so vivid and captivating that they seemed to tell everything there was to know about homesteading on the prairie. Turns out, Wilder left out a few things! With her newest middle-grade novel, Prairie Lotus, veteran children's author Linda Sue Park aims to rectify that. Like the Little House stories, this one describes pioneer life in rich detail, making it come alive for the reader. It's told through a different lens, though, one of prejudice and small-mindedness, not just against Asians but against Native Americans as well. Through smart, brave Hanna we see the courage and resilience that is required not just to do daily battle against these hardships but also to triumph over them. Prairie Lotus ends on a positive, hopeful note, teaching valuable lessons about empathy, inclusion, and standing up for what's right along the way. While I didn't end up absolutely loving the novel, I did find it interesting, important, and eye-opening.
(Readalikes: Reminds me of the Little House on the Prairie books by Laura Ingalls Wilder as well as The Downstairs Girl by Stacey Lee)
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for violence and scenes of peril
To the FTC, with love: Another library fine find
Monday, January 12, 2015
Newbery Medal Winner Full of History and Heart
1:00 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
Tree-Ear, an orphan living in 12th Century Korea, has one desire: to create beautiful celadon pottery like the skilled artisans for which his village is known. He has little opportunity to do so, however, since his time is occupied by eking out a meager living for himself and his guardian. Crippled and elderly, Crane-man has always insisted they do so honestly, without stealing or begging. Tree-Ear may be poor, but he's a good boy who's enjoyed a relatively happy life. Even if his greatest desire has remained unfulfilled.
While spying on a local potter in the hopes of learning some of his secrets, Tree-Ear accidentally breaks some of the man's wares. Tree-Ear promises to work off the debt and more, if the artist will only take him on as an apprentice. Overjoyed by the prospect of finally learning to create beautiful pottery, Tree-Ear does not realize what he has gotten himself into. The cranky potter will not make the apprenticeship easy, especially when he receives a royal commission that will, ultimately, require every ounce of skill and courage young Tree-Ear possesses.
Filled with history and heart, A Single Shard by Linda Sue Park tells a unique, inspiring story about one boy's quest to live his dream. Winner of the 2002 Newbery Medal, this quiet tale is a testament to the power of hard work, determination, and bravely soldiering on against insurmountable odds. Even though it's not my absolute favorite Newbery winner, A Single Shard is absolutely worth the read. It's a simple, but affecting story that teaches some great lessons.
If you're interested in seeing real Korean potters at work, check out this video that I discovered via Linda Sue Park's website. It's pretty amazing!
Thursday, January 08, 2015
A Long Walk to Water Both Harrowing and Hopeful
1:00 AM
(Image from Barnes & Noble)
The Lost Boys of Sudan were often in the news during the civil war that took place in that region from about 1983 to 2002. Their plights captured the attention of Americans (like myself) who simply could not imagine how these children managed to survive so much violence and bloodshed in such a parched, unforgiving landscape. After hearing the story of Salva Dut, a real Lost Boy, Newbery Medalist Linda Sue Park decided his experience needed to be shared. A Long Walk to Water is the memorable, based-on-a-true-story result.
The book focuses on two 11-year-old children, whose tales take place almost 20 years apart—Salva and a fictional girl named Nya. Nya (in 1985) is a poor girl from the Nuer tribe, whose household chores involve fetching water for her family from a faraway pond. Every day, she walks to the source, fills a container with the life-sustaining liquid, and trudges back home balancing the full bucket on her head. She empties it into jars, then repeats the journey. Nya spends all day, every day, walking to and from the pond. Salva (in 2008) is the son of a village judge. When he's not in school, he helps his father take care of the family's cattle. He's a member of the Dinka tribe, enemies of the Nuers. When rebel fighters burst into his school with guns, Salva hides in the bush. Thus begins his long, terrifying march through Sudan, Ethiopia, and eventually to safety at a refugee camp in Kenya.
A Long Walk to Water is a slim, spare novel. Nonetheless, it tells a vivid, moving tale that manages to be both harrowing and hopeful. Salva's courage and resilience are testaments to the power of human beings to overcome even the most desperate of circumstances. The fact that he gives back so powerfully (see Water for South Sudan: Drilling Holes, Transforming Lives) proves that love really does conquer all. His is a powerful, important story that will open eyes and touch hearts. I highly recommend the read.
(Readalikes: Reminded me of Home of the Brave by Katherine Applegate)
Grade:
If this were a movie, it would be rated:
for violence and intense situations
To the FTC, with love: I bought a copy of A Long Walk to Water with a portion of the millions I make from my lucrative career as a book blogger. Ha ha.
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