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Loading... Grandfather's Journey (Caldecott Medal Book)by Allen Say
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A lovely story about immigrants struggling with leaving their home country to adopt a life in another country. Story about a young man's journey to America during trying times. Well written, well illustrated! A good tale for looking at the family links with the past and present and most likely the future. This story deals with immigration from Japan, to America, and back to Japan. The illustrations are created in 'splendid photo-real watercolors.' The story comes full circle as the grandson who hears about his grandfather's time in America decides to go there himself. When grandfather, as a young father, returned to Japan with his wife and daughter they didn't stay in the village where he was raised. It was not the place for his American daughter. The events of the story tie in not only cultural but historical references. Grandfather never returned to the states because of the bombing that devastated Japan during WWII Grandfather's Journey is a poignant tale told by a young boy of his grandfather's move from Japan to the United States. He loves America, but eventually becomes homesick and moves back across the ocean. He marries and has a daughter, who has a son who is the narrator of the story. The narrator ends the story by going to visit California for himself but admits, "The funny thing is, the moment I am in one country, I am homesick for the other." This is a great multicultural story and would be a great introduction to many social studies lessons. Scholastic has some great additional resources to go along with this book. http://teacher.scholastic.com/lessonr... READING LEVEL: 3
Gr 3 Up-A personal history of three generations of the author's family that points out the emotions that are common to the immigrant experience. Splendid, photoreal watercolors have the look of formal family portraits or candid snapshots, all set against idyllic landscapes in Japan and in the U.S. (Sept., 1993) Say transcends the achievements of his Tree of Cranes and A River Dream with this breathtaking picture book, at once a very personal tribute to his grandfather and a distillation of universally shared emotions. Elegantly honed text accompanies large, formally composed paintings to convey Say's family history; the sepia tones and delicately faded colors of the art suggest a much-cherished and carefully preserved family album. A portrait of Say's grandfather opens the book, showing him in traditional Japanese dress, ``a young man when he left his home in Japan and went to see the world.'' Crossing the Pacific on a steamship, he arrives in North America and explores the land by train, by riverboat and on foot. One especially arresting, light-washed painting presents Grandfather in shirtsleeves, vest and tie, holding his suit jacket under his arm as he gazes over a prairie: ``The endless farm fields reminded him of the ocean he had crossed.'' Grandfather discovers that ``the more he traveled, the more he longed to see new places,'' but he nevertheless returns home to marry his childhood sweetheart. He brings her to California, where their daughter is born, but her youth reminds him inexorably of his own, and when she is nearly grown, he takes the family back to Japan. The restlessness endures: the daughter cannot be at home in a Japanese village; he himself cannot forget California. Although war shatters Grandfather's hopes to revisit his second land, years later Say repeats the journey: ``I came to love the land my grandfather had loved, and I stayed on and on until I had a daughter of my own.'' The internal struggle of his grandfather also continues within Say, who writes that he, too, misses the places of his childhood and periodically returns to them. The tranquility of the art and the powerfully controlled prose underscore the profundity of Say's themes, investing the final line with an abiding, aching pathos: ``The funny thing is, the moment I am in one country, I am homesick for the other.'' Ages 4-8. (Oct.) "The immigrant experience has rarely been so poignantly evoked as it is in this direct, lyrical narrative that is able to stir emotions through the sheer simplicity of its telling."
References to this work on external resources.
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)
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