Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Top Ten Korean-American Children's Books
I found this post on another wonderful adoptive family blog called "And We Lived Happily ever After..." I think these books look wonderful and I will definitely be filing this list away for future birthday gifts for our daughter!
Honorable Mentions
F is for Fabuloso by Marie G. Lee
Sumi doesn’t speak English and today is her very first day of school ever. Will it go well? [picture book for ages 2-7]
9. Bee-bim Bop! by Linda Sue Park
A light-hearted rhyming picture book on a favorite Korean national dish. It’s popular in restaurants but it evolved as a way to use up all the leftovers. In this book, a family spends all day preparing this little girl’s favorite meal. With a recipe at the end! [picture book for ages 2-5]
8. Where on Earth is My Bagel? by Frances and Ginger Park
A whimsical story about a little Korean boy who dreams of a New York bagel and, with the help of his friends, is able to make one. [picture book for ages 3-7]
7. Halmoni and the Picnic by Sook Nyul Choi
An advanced picture book about a girl and her Korean grandmother and how they both learn to bridge the cultural gap with food. [picture book for ages 5-8]
6. Yunmi and Halmoni’s Trip by Sook Nyul Choi
Halmoni takes her granddaughter on a trip back to Korea to meet the family, but Yunmi worries that her grandmother might not want to come back. [picture book for ages 5-8]
5. Kimchi and Calamari by Rose Kent
14-year-old Joseph Caldararo has a loving family and is a well-adjusted popular kid at school. But when his social studies teacher assigns a paper on Your Cultural heritage, his world gets turned upside down. He knows he’s adopted from Korea when he was just an infant and it’s never really bothered him before, but now it does. It doesn’t help that the new dry cleaners are taken over by a Korean family who are off-out by his adoption. And it makes his parents upset when he wants to learn more about his own cultural heritage. His best friend assists him in conducting an internet search to try to trace his parents but that’s a long shot at best! But what to write for this paper? His confusion about who he is leads him down a path of deceit and now everything is a mess. On top of this, he’s trying to get a date for the school dance. Whoever said that middle school is tough is right! [chapter book, ages 9-12]
4. The Year of Impossible Goodbyes by Sook Nyul Choi
A haunting but ultimately uplifting story of author Sook Nyul Choi’s experience living in war-torn North Korea. [chapter book for middle schoolers]
3. The Kite Fighters by Linda Sue Park
Set in 15th century Korea, Korea’s Golden Age, two brothers — one skilled in kite making and the other skilled in kite flying — combine their skills to compete in a kite flying contest on behalf of the king. [ages 7-12]
2. Seesaw Girl by Linda Sue Park
A glimpse into the lives of the nobility during the Golden Age of Korea and the restrictions placed on women. [chapter book for ages 8-12]
1. A Single Shard by Linda Sue Park
Newbery award winning book about a famous potter during the Golden Age of Korea. [chapter book for ages 8-12]
I found this post on another wonderful adoptive family blog called "And We Lived Happily ever After..." I think these books look wonderful and I will definitely be filing this list away for future birthday gifts for our daughter!
Honorable Mentions
The Name Jar by Yangsook Choi
When Unhei moves from Korea to the United States, she is a little embarrassed by her name so she tells her new classmates that she doesn’t have one. They all help to choose a new one for her by putting choices into a jar but in the end, Unhei decides that her Korean name is just perfect. This is the perfect book for anyone with an “ethic first or middle name” that they are a little embarrassed about. [picture book, ages 5-9]
F is for Fabuloso by Marie G. Lee
I happened upon this Korea-American author for grades 4-6th and wanted to share it because it’s a fabuloso book! It’s unclear why her book didn’t make a bigger splash when it came out about 10 years ago. She’s a really vibrant voice for Asian American children’s literature so I wanted to let you know about her. The author is a second generation Korean American and grew up in Minnesota much like her lead character, Jin-Ha, in F is for Fabuloso. It’s a tender and gentle story about straddling two worlds especially as the go-between for her mother who is shy to speak English. [chapter book, ages 8-12]
If It Hadn’t Been for Yoon Jun is another book that I was trying to locate at the library which I wasn’t able to find yet, but I suspect it is also very good. I will find it and update you!
Top 10
10. Sumi’s First Day of School Ever by Soyung PakSumi doesn’t speak English and today is her very first day of school ever. Will it go well? [picture book for ages 2-7]
9. Bee-bim Bop! by Linda Sue Park
A light-hearted rhyming picture book on a favorite Korean national dish. It’s popular in restaurants but it evolved as a way to use up all the leftovers. In this book, a family spends all day preparing this little girl’s favorite meal. With a recipe at the end! [picture book for ages 2-5]
8. Where on Earth is My Bagel? by Frances and Ginger Park
A whimsical story about a little Korean boy who dreams of a New York bagel and, with the help of his friends, is able to make one. [picture book for ages 3-7]
7. Halmoni and the Picnic by Sook Nyul Choi
An advanced picture book about a girl and her Korean grandmother and how they both learn to bridge the cultural gap with food. [picture book for ages 5-8]
6. Yunmi and Halmoni’s Trip by Sook Nyul Choi
Halmoni takes her granddaughter on a trip back to Korea to meet the family, but Yunmi worries that her grandmother might not want to come back. [picture book for ages 5-8]
5. Kimchi and Calamari by Rose Kent
14-year-old Joseph Caldararo has a loving family and is a well-adjusted popular kid at school. But when his social studies teacher assigns a paper on Your Cultural heritage, his world gets turned upside down. He knows he’s adopted from Korea when he was just an infant and it’s never really bothered him before, but now it does. It doesn’t help that the new dry cleaners are taken over by a Korean family who are off-out by his adoption. And it makes his parents upset when he wants to learn more about his own cultural heritage. His best friend assists him in conducting an internet search to try to trace his parents but that’s a long shot at best! But what to write for this paper? His confusion about who he is leads him down a path of deceit and now everything is a mess. On top of this, he’s trying to get a date for the school dance. Whoever said that middle school is tough is right! [chapter book, ages 9-12]
4. The Year of Impossible Goodbyes by Sook Nyul Choi
A haunting but ultimately uplifting story of author Sook Nyul Choi’s experience living in war-torn North Korea. [chapter book for middle schoolers]
3. The Kite Fighters by Linda Sue Park
Set in 15th century Korea, Korea’s Golden Age, two brothers — one skilled in kite making and the other skilled in kite flying — combine their skills to compete in a kite flying contest on behalf of the king. [ages 7-12]
2. Seesaw Girl by Linda Sue Park
A glimpse into the lives of the nobility during the Golden Age of Korea and the restrictions placed on women. [chapter book for ages 8-12]
1. A Single Shard by Linda Sue Park
Newbery award winning book about a famous potter during the Golden Age of Korea. [chapter book for ages 8-12]
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1 comments:
We are praying for her too.
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