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The Lau family travels to Antigua, Guatemala, to visit their cousins during the Holy Week of Easter. Although the Laus are Chinese and Buddhist, they enjoy the processions walking through the city. They also enjoy the elaborate carpets made of colored sawdust that line the streets, but the heroine doesn't understand why the carpets are made, only to be destroyed. Sumario en español: Han invitado a la familia Lau a pasar la Semana Santa con los primos en La Antigua, Guatemala. La familia es show more china y budista, pero aun así a mami le conmueve el magnífico espectáculo de las procesiones de la Semana Santa. Uno de los aspectos más originales de la Semana Santa en Antigua es la creación de alfombras de aserrín sobre el trayecto de las procesiones. La niña fabrica su propia alfombra con la ayuda de sus primos y hermanos. Se sorprende al darse cuenta de que la procesión va a destruir la alfombra, y en desesperación se para frente a ella para tratar de impedir su paso. show less

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3 reviews
Sawdust Carpets is actually about a little girl's involvement in a Spaniard tradition. This book is good to read to younger kids while teaching about multi-cultures and religion. The protagonist's family is Chinese but lives in Guatemala and can understand Spanish. This was an interesting thing because the reader gets insight into various cultures. The tradition is to use colored sawdust to create carpet like art in the streets so the procession can walk over it while carrying the statues of religious symbols. This can teach about the tradition, art, and the religious practice. There's also a page in the book that the mom talks to her sister about traditions from china and how they are similar, this could show children that some show more traditions are similar. The protagonist in this story is excited to make her own sawdust carpet but when the procession is about to walk over it she becomes upset. Someone tells her the importance of making the carpets and the destroying of them is to exemplify that life follows death and death follows life and I think it is a beautiful message. show less
(multicultural, easy, fiction) The Lau family has been invited to spend Easter with their cousins in Antigua. Even though they are Chinese and Buddhist, they are looking forward to celebrating Easter. One of the traditions is to create a colored sawdust carpet for the Easter procession to march over, destroying many hours of hard work in the process. This is symbolic of the life and death of Christ, and of the life cycle itself, but our tiny heroine doesn't see it that way. Will she be able to accept the beauty of the tradition and create another sawdust blanket next year? This book supplies all the necessary elements of characters, plot, conflict, resolution, etc. I think children might find all the different cultural elements show more introduced in this story confusing. There are so many it can get hard to keep them straight. However, if you have the patience, this is an excellent example of mulitcultural book. A good segueway book to read prior to the introduction of many topics:chinese, buddhist, hispanic cultures, religious observances, religious tolerance, etc. show less
A book about a young girl's effort to make and save a sawdust carpet. At one part of the book, the author describes how this carpet (which isnt a real carpet) is made.
½

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Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Picture Books
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ73 .C216354 .ALanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
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Members
39
Popularity
746,562
Reviews
3
Rating
(4.10)
Languages
English, Spanish
Media
Paper
ISBNs
3