Tag: Authors - China

China & Taiwan

China
Cover of Lemon Butterfly featuring an illustration of a white horse on a black background.

Lemon Butterfly

By Cao Wenxuan, Roger Mello (Illustrator)

Lemon Butterfly. Cao Wenxuan. Illustrated by Roger Mello. Reycraft Books, 2020. ISBN 9781478869757. 32 p. (Ages 4-9).

One of China’s most popular children’s book authors, Cao Wenxuan was the first Chinese to receive the Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writing. This book is the fruit of pairing Cao’s text with the artwork of Brazilian illustrator (and also Hans Christian Andersen Award for Illustration winner) Roger Mello, who adds striking illustrations in vibrant primary colors. The story follows the quest of a butterfly to find a field of flowers, “the most beautiful thing in the world.” [dj]

Cover for Mao and Me featuring an illustration of a child in a chair with a schoolbag hanging on it reading Mao's Little Red Book with a portrait of Mao in the background. The background color is red and the text is gold.

Mao and Me

By Chen Jiang Hong, Claudia Zoe Bedrick (Translator)

Mao and Me. Chen Jiang Hong. Translated by Claudia Zoe Bedrick. Enchanted Lion Books, 2008. Originally published as Mao et moi in French by l’École des loisirs, in Paris, in 2008. ISBN 9781592700790. 96 p. (Ages 6-10). Picture book.

Though born and educated in China, artist Chen Jiang Hong has lived in Paris since 1987. Mao and Me is his first autobiographical picture book about his childhood during Cultural Revolution-era China. In a realistic style, Chen narrates his experiences growing up, as the cataclysmic events of the era rain hardship down on his family and neighbors. All the while, however, he retains a child’s view of Mao, and perhaps even some lingering affection for him. [cr/dj]

Cover of The Moose of Ewenki featuring a detailed illustration of a moose's head peeking into frame from the left on a cream background. The book's title is displayed in teal and the author and illustrator's names are displayed in green.

The Moose of Ewenki

By Gerelchimeg Blackcrane

The Moose of Ewenki. Gerelchimeg Blackcrane. Translated by Helen Mixter. Illustrated by Jiu Er. Greystone Kids, 2019. Originally published as Ewenke de tuo lu in Chinese, by Jie Li Chu Ban She, Nanning, 2018. ISBN 9781771645386. 68 p. (Ages 5-9). Picture book.

Written by a multi-award-winning, best-selling (and rare) author from Inner Mongolia, an autonomous region in China bordering the country of Mongolia. Features a hunter from the reindeer-herding Ewenki people who inadvertently kills a mother moose, leaving an orphan calf. The hunter takes in the calf, but their relationship proves hard to sustain as the moose gets bigger (and a lot hungrier), and the hunter ages. The text is accompanied by richly detailed, painterly illustrations by Jiu Er, the first Chinese illustrator named to the IBBY Honour List. [dj]

Cover for A New Year's Reunion featuring an illustration of a family at a table eating soup. The child is holding up a coin to her two parents. The background is red and the title is gold.

A New Year's Reunion

By Li Qiong Yu, Zhu Chen Liang (Illustrator)

A New Year’s Reunion. Li Qiong Yu. Illustrated by Zhu Chen Liang. Candlewick Press, 2011. Originally published in China, in 2008. ISBN 9780763667481. 40 p. (Ages 3-7). Picture book.

A New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Book for 2011, this is the poignant story of a girl whose migrant worker father only returns home once a year at New Year’s—for just three days. The illustrations offer brightly-colored depictions of Chinese New Year traditions, but more importantly, reveal the touching relationship between father and daughter. [cr/dj]

Cover of Playing with Lanterns featuring an illustration of four children holding lanterns on a snowy night with houses in the background and fireworks in the sky behind them.

Playing with Lanterns

By Wang Yage, Helen Wang (Translator), Zhu Chengliang (Illustrator)

Playing with Lanterns. Wang Yage. Translated by Helen Wang. Illustrated by Zhu Chengliang. Amazon Crossing Kids, 2021. ISBN 9781542029841. 40 p. (Ages 5-8). Picture book.

A White Ravens selection by first-time author Wang Yage, a literature professor, this story highlights the New Year Lantern Festival unique to Shaanxi, in northwest China. Award-winning illustrator Zhu Chengliang contrasts the bright, candy colors of bundled-up children and lanterns with the white of the snowy setting. The children’s fun in parading about with colorful lanterns lifts off the page, but is moderated by the sadness of having to crush and set aflame the lanterns on the 15th day of the New Year. [cr/dj]

Cover for The Story of Ink and Water featuring a watercolor illustration in black and nude on a cream background suggesting two young children and an animal running by.

The Story of Ink and Water

By Li Qingye, Chun Zhang (Translator), Peilong Liang (Illustrator)

The Story of Ink and Water. Li Qingye. Translated by Chun Zhang. Illustrated by Peilong Liang. Balestier Press, 2018. Originally published in China in 2013. ISBN 9781911221074. 36 p. (Ages 3 and up+).

An imaginative exploration of Chinese painting from a child’s perspective. We meet Water Girl, Brush Boy and Ink Boy, who discover that if they work as a team, they can create beautiful paintings. Former nursery school teacher Li Qingye weaves into the text details about traditional Chinese ink painting, which are complemented by the masterful ink paintings by illustrator Peilong Liang, which themselves are examples of the techniques described. Liang is an award-winning illustrator. [dj]

Cover of Bronze and Sunflower featuring an illustration of two kids, a boy and a girl, riding on the back of a water buffalo who is wading through a rice paddy. In the background is a rural landscape, houses, mountains, and birds.

Bronze and Sunflower

By Cao Wenxuan, Helen Wang (Translator), Meilo So (Illustrator)

Bronze and Sunflower. Cao Wenxuan. Translated by Helen Wang. Illustrated by Meilo So. Candlewick, 2017. Originally published by Phoenix Juvenile and Children’s Publishing in China, and then released by Candlewick sister company Walker Books in the UK in 2015. ISBN 9780763688165. 400 p. (Ages 9-12.) Fiction.

The Cultural Revolution provides the largely unspoken background to this beautiful story, in which a 7-year-old girl and her artist father are forced to move to rural China to be re-educated. After her father dies early in the book, she is taken in by the poorest family in the village. Despite their vastly different circumstances, she forms a tight bond with her mute brother, new family and fellow villagers. Mutual love and caring enable them to endure fires, floods, lack of food and bitter cold. This book earned translator Helen Wang the 2017 Marsh Award for Translation of Children’s Literature. Raved librarian Betsy Bird, “It’s bold and unfamiliar. Touching and terrifying. Historical but somehow also timeless... Do you truly want your kids to be citizens of the world? Then hand that world to them. Give them this book.” [dj]

Cover for Rice featuring a close up of the green plants that grow out of rice fields with dew on the leaves and the title 'Rice' in large print made up of rice kernels. There are dragonflies flying among the plants.

Rice

By Hongcheng Yu

Rice. Hongcheng Yu. Reycraft Books, 2020. ISBN 9781478869368. (Ages 8-12). Nonfiction.

A gorgeously illustrated nonfiction book on how rice is cultivated in China. Author/illustrator Hongcheng Yu lived in the mountains with farmers for two years to observe their planting and harvesting practices to create this book. Recipient of an honorable mention in the 2020 Freeman Book Awards, from the National Consortium for Teaching About Asia. [cr/dj]

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