PICTURE BOOKS
Mo, Yan

The Gale

(2) K-3 Adapted by Xiaoxiao Guan. Translated by Ying-Hwa Hu. Illustrated by Chengliang Zhu. In this moving, bittersweet picture-book debut by a Nobel Prize winning Chinese author, a child learns an important lesson about resilience in the face of sudden changes. At seven, the protagonist is old enough to accompany Yeye (grandfather) into the fields near their rural home in China to help cut tall grass for animal feed. What starts out for the child as a carefree day playing outdoors takes a turn by late afternoon when dark clouds and a wind storm roll through. The Chinese folk art inspired pictures are wonderfully evocative, transporting readers to the countryside as scenes shift from misty morning to bright summer afternoon, then panic-filled stormy climax and ambiguous ending. The images and matter-of-fact text weave a tight tale about how one moment can upend everything, which is foreshadowed early on when Yeye sings some old "strange happy, yet sad" songs the child doesn't understand. This semiautobiographical ode to intergenerational family love becomes even more poignant in the appended selection from the original

RELATED 

Get connected. Join our global community of more than 200,000 librarians and educators.

This coverage is free for all visitors. Your support makes this possible.

We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing.

ALREADY A SUBSCRIBER?