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* IRA Children's Choice
* NCSS Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People
Àú¸íÇÑ IllustratorÀÎ Jon J Muth°¡ 2006³â¿¡ Caldecott Honor»óÀ» ¹ÞÀº "Zen Shorts"¿Í ¸¶Âù°¡Áö·Î ÆÒ´õ°õ ½ºÆ¿¿öÅͰ¡ Ä®(¸·³»), ¸¶ÀÌŬ(Çü), ¿¡µð(´©³ª)ÀÇ 3³²¸Å¿¡°Ô "ÀÌÁß¼º"À» ÁÖÁ¦·Î ÇÑ ¼±¹®´äÀÇ À̾߱⸦ µé·ÁÁÝ´Ï´Ù.
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Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 043963430X
ISBN-13: 978-0439634304
Ã¥ Å©±â: 28.6 cm x 27.6 cm
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Book Description
It's Halloween.
The trees are ablaze in fiery reds. Excited children don colorful costumes. And there's mystery and fun around every corner!
When Addy, Michael, and Karl finish trick-or-treating, their bags are brimming with treats. But the fun isn't over yet. Their good friend Stillwater the panda has one more special surprise in store for them. A mysterious visitor is about to tell them a spine-tingling story -- one that will fill each and every reader with wonder.
School Library Journal
It's Halloween, and the three siblings introduced in Muth's Zen Shorts (2005) and Zen Ties (2008, Scholastic) are working on their costumes when Stillwater appears at their door. The panda invites Addy, Michael, and Karl to meet him after trick-or-treating to hear a ghost story. The walk through the forest is filled with mystery. Stillwater himself - who said he would be a ghost this Halloween - is at times almost transparent, and his round, white bamboo lantern mimics the full moon. Inside his house is another panda who looks exactly like Stillwater. His story, which is told in words and brush-and-ink drawings, is based on an old Zen koan, or puzzle, about a young woman who is with her husband in a faraway land and yet very ill and at home with her parents. It invites listeners to consider duality, or perception vs. reality, and is at the same time a wonderfully haunting tale that's perfect for Halloween. When the story ends and the illustrations return to the earlier complex, evocative watercolors, it isn't clear whether Stillwater and the storyteller are two entities or one. The children and readers are left to consider this and other mysteries as both tales come to a close. Muth's artistic gifts are so breathtaking that they will draw in even those whose attention spans are not at first up to the demands of the text. The book functions on many levels, from seasonal Halloween story to ghost yarn to deep philosophy, and succeeds spectacularly on all of them.
Booklist
Following the Caldecott Honor Book Zen Shorts (2005) and Zen Ties (2008), Muth offers another gentle, reflective story about Stillwater, the Zen Buddhist panda, and his three young friends, siblings Michael, Karl, and Addie. It¡¯s Halloween, and after the candy-collecting fun, Stillwater promises another treat: a visit from a storyteller, who looks a lot like the kids¡¯ panda friend. ¡°Is that Stillwater?¡± asks Karl. ¡°Yes . . . no! . . . I don¡¯t know!¡± whispers Michael. That theme of duality is at the heart of the storyteller¡¯s tale about a young woman who seemingly lives in two places at once. In an author¡¯s note, Muth discusses Zen koans, and as a whole, this title feels more like a vehicle for the meditative tale rather than a developed, integrated story. But Muth grounds the book¡¯s esoteric elements with humor, everyday details from a child¡¯s world, and extraordinary watercolor-and-ink scenes that contrast the fiery shades of autumn with silvery moonlight and utilize a ghostly, simplified palette to amplify the koan¡¯s elemental mysteries. A beautiful, contemplative offering. |
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