The Lotus Seed

by Sherry Garland (Author) Tatsuro Kiuchi (Illustrator)

Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

"My grandmother saw the emperor cry the day he lost his golden dragon throne."

So begins Sherry Garland's emotional tale of a Vietnamese family forced to flee from their homeland to escape a devastating civil war. Set against a background of historical events, "The Lotus Seed" thoughtfully portrays refugees who have adapted to a different way of life in a new country without losing touch with their cultural heritage. Theirs is an American story about the continuity of family and culture.

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Publishers Weekly

The spare simplicity of Garland's tale about remembering one's birthplace is richly amplified by Kiuchi's arresting, light-filled paintings—his debut—awash with burnished gold and greens. As elegant as the lotus flower itself, the book's design includes subtle white borders on cream paper that frame both the poetic text and the opposing portrait-like illustrations. Garland ( Song of the Buffalo Boy ) focuses her story on Ba, a Vietnamese girl whose escape from the devastating war in Vietnam is told by her granddaughter. "My grandmother saw / the emperor cry," she says, "the day he lost / his golden dragon throne." Wanting a memento of the event, the child "plucked a seed / from a lotus pod / that rattled / in the Imperial garden." Eventually, Ba arrives in America: "a strange new land / with . . . towering buildings / that scraped the sky." (Kiuchi's overhead perspective of skyscrapers and streaming traffic is an especially striking image.) Ba plants the lotus seed; when it blooms, she gives each of her grandchildren one of its seeds so they will recall the land of her birth. The lotus, she tells them "is the flower / of life and hope." Exquisite artwork fuses with a compelling narrative—a concise endnote places the story effectively within a historical context—to produce a moving and polished offering. Ages 8-up. Chil dren's BOMC Selection. (Apr.)

Kirkus


ALA/Booklist

Starred Review

School Library Journal

Gr 2-5— A nameless Vietnamese narrator tells of her grandmother who, as a girl, accidentally sees the last emperor cry on the day of his abdication. She surreptitiously enters the palace gardens and takes a lotus seed as a remembrance of that day and her ruler. She keeps the seed with her through vicissitudes of war, flight, and emigration until one summer a grandson (the narrator's brother) steals it and plants it in a mud pool near the family's American home. Grandmother is inconsolable when the exact spot cannot be found. The following spring, a lotus grows from the mud puddle and in time the elderly woman gives a seed to each of her grandchildren, reserving one for herself. The narrator vows to plant hers one day, give the seeds to her own children, keep the tradition, and share her grandmother's memories. This tale of hope and continuance is told with disarming simplicity. Interesting oil paintings, largely in earth tones, are slightly mannered, yet culturally accurate, and often moving in their amplification of the text. A warm addition to school and public library collections. —John Philbrook, San Francisco Public Library
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780152014834
Lexile Measure
810
Guided Reading Level
N
Publisher
Clarion Books
Publication date
February 19, 1997
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV039250 - Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes | Emigration & Immigration
JUV011020 - Juvenile Fiction | People & Places | United States - Asian American
JUV030020 - Juvenile Fiction | People & Places | Asia
Library of Congress categories
Vietnam
Lotus
Children's Book of the Month Club
Alternate Selection
Black-Eyed Susan Award
Nominee

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