Posts Tagged ‘diverse-books’
Posted on November 19th, 2018 by pajamapress
Brigham Young University, Children’s Book & Media Reviews
“Rating: Excellent…
Told in free verse from Malini’s point of view, this tale reveals the coming-of-age of a young Sri Lankan girl. A note at the back of the book explains more about life in Sri Lanka, the importance of rice as a staple food, and the two monsoon seasons which affect the area. Readers unfamiliar with this small country would likely benefit from reading the note first to provide context for the story. Poignantly written, When The Rain Comes provides insight into the diversity of life through Malini’s weighty struggle to ensure prosperity for her community in the coming year.”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Alma Fullerton, Kim La Fave, When the Rain Comes | Tagged alma fullerton, book-review, canlit, diverse-books, diverse-picture-books, kidlit, Kim La Fave, sri-lanka, strong-heroines
Posted on November 18th, 2018 by pajamapress
Booklist
“Skrypuch continues her collaboration with the Ho family in telling the stories of their escape from Vietnam after the war. Here the youngest daughter, Van Ho, pieces together memories of being the one who was left behind at the age of four….
As a work of fragmented and painful memories from the time Van was between the ages of four and eight, the narrative is impressively credible, capturing her feelings of confused abandonment, visceral descriptions of her life in Ho Chi Minh City, and gradual adjustment to being separated from her immediate family….”
—Amina Chaudhri
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Marsha Skrypuch, Too Young to Escape, Van Ho | Tagged book-review, canlit, diverse-books, diverse-middle-grade-books, juvenile-biography, juvenile-nonfiction, kidlit, Marsha Skrypuch, mg-lit, middle-grade-books, middle-grade-nonfiction, Van Ho, vietnamese-refugee, vietnamese-refugee-crisis
Posted on November 17th, 2018 by pajamapress
Quill & Quire **Starred Review**
“Skrypuch and the now-adult Van Ho collaborate on this account of Van’s life from the morning she woke to find her mother and siblings gone to when, four years later, she was reunited with her family in Toronto….
[T]hroughout the book, the authors eschew sentimentality and sensationalism, creating a straightforward autobiography that is truthful about resilience and the often unpredictable ways children act and react.”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Marsha Skrypuch, Van Ho | Tagged book-review, canlit, diverse-books, diverse-middle-grade-books, juvenile-biography, juvenile-nonfiction, kidlit, Marsha Skrypuch, mg-lit, middle-grade-books, middle-grade-nonfiction, Van Ho, vietnamese-refugee, vietnamese-refugee-crisis
Posted on November 16th, 2018 by pajamapress
Crimson Review of Children’s & YA Literature
“Phoebe and her grandmother, Nan-ma, are out for a walk when Phoebe is teased by two kids about the color of her skin. They call her ‘French toast’…Phoebe likens their skin tones to “warm banana bread” and “maple syrup poured over French toast,” invoking comfort and good feelings as she thinks about her family, allowing her to embrace the beauty in diversity and self-acceptance. With Thisdale’s beautifully decadent and dream-like illustrations of the food described, this may be a story best read before snack time.”
—Joi Mahand
Click here to read the full review
Posted in François Thisdale, French Toast, Kari-Lynn Winters | Tagged book-review, bullying, canlit, diverse-books, diverse-picture-books, francois-thisdale, intergenerational-friendship, kari-lynn-winters, kidlit, mixed-race-families, picture-books, racism
Posted on November 8th, 2018 by pajamapress
Midwest Book Review
“A wonderfully entertaining picture book with an important underlying message for children ages 3 to 6, Ben and the Scaredy-Dog is an especially recommended addition to family, daycare center, preschool, elementary school, and community library picture book collections.”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Ben and the Scaredy-Dog, Kim La Fave, Sarah Ellis | Tagged book-review, canlit, childhood-fears, common-fears, diverse-books, dogs, empowered-children, kidlit, Kim La Fave, new-experiences, new-friends, overcoming-fears, picture-book, sarah-ellis
Posted on November 7th, 2018 by pajamapress
Kids’ Book Buzz
“After I started reading about Max and Erv, I really liked the story….It’s a cute story that reminds us that no matter your size, we all have things we might be afraid of, but we should give things a chance.”
—Safiya, Age 9
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Ben and the Scaredy-Dog, Kim La Fave, Sarah Ellis | Tagged book-review, canlit, childhood-fears, common-fears, diverse-books, dogs, empowered-children, kidlit, Kim La Fave, new-experiences, new-friends, overcoming-fears, picture-book, sarah-ellis
Posted on November 2nd, 2018 by pajamapress
International Examiner
“Adrift At Sea is a powerful historical nonfiction story…
Adrift at Sea is the true story of Tuan Ho, a young Vietnamese boy who escapes his country’s military regime in 1981 and becomes part of the wave of ‘boat people’ refugees hoping to reach America. Given no other options but to leave their homeland in hopes of a better life…
Seeing nothing but hopelessness, tragedy, and panic on the ocean floor, Tuan’s mother quickly realizes something lying beneath the ocean floor that would turn around their fortunes and deliver them a glimmer of hope. As Tuan and his family are delivered to safety, they can take comfort in knowing that it can only get better from here. Filled with colorful and vibrant drawings that engages readers from start to finish, Adrift at Sea is a powerful historical nonfiction story.”
Click here to read the full review.
Posted in Adrift at Sea, Brian Deines, Marsha Skrypuch, Tuan Ho | Tagged Brian Deines, canlit, displaced-persons, diverse-books, diverse-picture-books, kidlit, Marsha Skrypuch, picture-books, tuan-ho, Vietnam War, vietnamese-boat-people, vietnamese-refugees
Posted on October 10th, 2018 by pajamapress
“When Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch co-wrote Adrift at Sea: A Vietnamese Boy’s Story of Survival with Tuan Ho, she began a family’s story of escape from Vietnam in the aftermath of the Vietnam War and taking of power by the communists. In that picture book, illustrated by Brian Deines, a mother and her two daughters, Loan and Lan, and six-year-old son Tuan escape Vietnam by boat, hopeful of joining father and the eldest daughter Linh in Canada. But there was another story. Because four-year-old Van is left behind. Too Young to Escape is her story….
Van Ho, who lived this story, tells it through Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch’s pen of extraordinary writing which reflects both Van’s youthful point of view and her trauma. Her story is disquieting but it’s also uplifting, focusing on Van’s resilience. Told from her perspective, from Van explaining away her family’s absence before she learns the reason to her obligation to completing chores many of our culture might deem inappropriate for one so young to finding a friend in a girl less fortunate than herself, Van’s story of being left behind is heartbreaking.
Enhancing Van Ho’s story with photographs and interviews with her father, Nam Ho, and mother, Phuoc Ho, Too Young to Escape gives a snapshot of a different time and place, one of upheaval and loss, perseverance and endurance, that ends with a reunion and a good life in Canada. It is a story of survival, even if Van Ho was Too Young to Escape.”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Too Young to Escape | Tagged book-review, canlit, diverse-books, diverse-middle-grade-books, juvenile-biography, juvenile-nonfiction, kidlit, Marsha Skrypuch, mg-lit, middle-grade-books, middle-grade-nonfiction, Van Ho, vietnamese-refugee, vietnamese-refugee-crisis
Posted on October 9th, 2018 by pajamapress
“Rating: 5…Van’s story is necessarily informed by Skrypuch’s research and imagination in addition to Van’s memories of her distant childhood as corroborated by other members of her family. The product, is an extremely engaging account of a childhood in challenging circumstances….
Van’s story is a page-turner. Children will relate to her sense of injustice….
Too Young to Escape is a welcome reminder of the post-Vietnam War refugee crisis that saw Canada, France, the United States and Australia welcome strangers in need. Readers will appreciate hearing this personal story from a child’s perspective. The book will include an eight page colour insert of photographs of Van and her family as children plus a recent photo of Vanessa (formerly Van) with her spouse and children and a final image of Vanessa and her beloved Bà Ngoąi taken in 1997. Skrypuch includes very brief interviews with Van’s parents, Nam Ho and Phuoc Ho, that help to explain the context of the time including the reasons for their difficult decisions.
Readers may have wondered why the telephone or e-mail was not used by Van’s parents. The paucity of telephones in Vietnam in the early 1980s and censorship of physical mail by government officials are two more challenges that Van’s parents note in their interviews. Modern technology may make it easier to communicate over long distances today, but civil wars, state-sanctioned or state-sponsored discrimination and persecution are enduring reasons for normal people to be transformed into refugees in the twenty-first century. Van’s story and those of her family members remain timeless as well as time-specific.
Highly Recommended”
—Val Ken Lem is a librarian at Ryerson University in Toronto, Ontario
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Too Young to Escape | Tagged canlit, diverse-books, diverse-middle-grade-books, juvenile-biography, juvenile-non-fiction, Marsha Skrypuch, mg-lit, middle-grade-nonfiction, nonfiction, Van Ho, vietnamese-refugee, vietnamese-refugee-crisis
Posted on September 17th, 2018 by pajamapress
“With simple but engaging language, Skrypuch recounts Van Ho’s true story of her lonely and hard life in Vietnam during the years she was separated from her family. Skrypuch offers readers myriad opportunities to identify with Van, who navigates school, friendship, bullying, and poverty, while also giving them insight into less-common American experiences such as political oppression and asylum. The story covers four years of Van’s life, including her reunion with parents and siblings in Canada and the immediate culture shock of arriving….This illuminating chapter book respects an often overlooked demographic, providing transitioning readers a truthful yet age-appropriate introduction to big issues that still affect people to this day. (Historical fiction. 7-11)”
Click here to read the full review
Posted in Too Young to Escape | Tagged book-review, canlit, diverse-books, diverse-middle-grade, immigration, kidlit, Marsha Skrypuch, memoir, mg-lit, middle-grade-nonfiction, Van Ho, Vanessa Ho, vietnamese-refugee