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* Newbery Medal
* ALA Best Book for Young Adults
* New York Public Library, 100 Titles for Reading and Sharing
* ALA Notable Book for Children
* Asian/Pacific American Award for Literature, Author Honor
* School Library Journal, Best Books of the Year
* Booklist Editors Choice
* Capitol Choices Selection
* CCBC Choices
* Young Readers Choice Award
* Charlie May Simon Book Award Nominee (AR)
* Dorothy Canfield Fisher Book Award Nominee (VT)
* Lamplighter Award Nominee
* Massachusetts Childrens Book Award Nominee
* NCTE Adventuring with Books: Booklist for Pre-K – Grade 6
* NCTE Kaleidoscope: A Multicultural Booklist for Grades K-8
* Nene Award Nominee (HI)
* Notable Books for a Global Society (ILA)
* Pennsylvania Young Readers Choice Award Nominee
* Rebecca Caudill Young Readers Book Award Master List (IL)
* Sequoyah Book Award (OK)
* William Allen White Childrens Book Award Nominee (KS)
ѱμ ʷ Ƶ ο Newbery Medal Linda Sue Park Դϴ. "ĸ "̶ Ⱓ ʵԴϴ.
12 ڱ̿ 12 Ƽҳ (Tree-ear) ڱ پ ڱ⸦ մϴ. δ ̿ پ ڱ⸦ տ ġ ðϴ. ӳ ް ǰ....
å ̱ ¾ ѱ ̱ ѱ ؼ ڶϴ. ȥ ϰ ̵ Ű鼭 ڽ ѱ ɷ ٴ ݰ Ǿ ѱ ȭ å а Ǿ ̷ å µ ۰Դ Ŀٶ ع Ǿٰ մϴ.
å ҳ ϴ ̷ Ҹ ֽϴ.
[ ]
Paperback: 176 pages
ISBN-10: 0547534264
ISBN-13: 9780547534268
å ũ: 19.4 cm x 13 cm
[ ]
Book Description
Tree-ear is an orphan boy in a 12th-century Korean potters village. For a long time he is content living with Crane-man under a bridge barely surviving on scraps of food. All that changes when he sees master potter Min making his beautiful pottery. Tree-ear sneaks back to Mins workplace and dreams of creating his own pots someday. When he accidentally breaks a pot, he must work for the master to pay for the damage. Though the work is long and hard, Tree-ear is eager to learn. Then he is sent to the Kings Court to show the masters pottery. Little does Tree-ear know that this difficult and dangerous journey will change his life forever.
Publisher's Weekly
Park (Seesaw Girl) molds a moving tribute to perseverance and creativity in this finely etched novel set in mid- to late 12th-century Korea. In Ch'ul'po, a potter's village, Crane-man (so called because of one shriveled leg) raises 10-year-old orphan Tree Ear (named for a mushroom that grows "without benefit of "parent-seed"). Though the pair reside under a bridge, surviving on cast-off rubbish and fallen grains of rice, they believe "stealing and begging... made a man no better than a dog." From afar, Tree Ear admires the work of the potters until he accidentally destroys a piece by Min, the most talented of the town's craftsmen, and pays his debt in servitude for nine days. Park convincingly conveys how a community of artists works (chopping wood for a communal kiln, cutting clay to be thrown, etc.) and effectively builds the relationships between characters through their actions (e.g., Tree Ear hides half his lunch each day for Crane-man, and Min's soft-hearted wife surreptitiously fills the bowl). She charts Tree Ear's transformation from apprentice to artist and portrays his selflessness during a pilgrimage to Songdo to show Min's work to the royal court he faithfully continues even after robbers shatter the work and he has only a single shard to show. Readers will not soon forget these characters or their sacrifices.
Children's Literature
This beautifully-crafted tale of an orphan boy named Tree-ear takes place in 12th century Korea in the small potter's village of Ch'ulp'o. Tree-ear (named after a mushroom that grows on a tree without a parent seed) lives under a bridge with his one-legged friend, Crane-man, (hence the name) surviving on scraps pulled from rubbish heaps and rice foraged from fields. They possess a fierce integrity that keeps them from begging and stealing and share a friendship akin to father and son. Each day Tree-ear goes to the bushes behind the studio of the brilliant potter, Min, who works outside. Tree-ear dreams of one day making a pot of his own. After breaking one of Min's wares, Tree-ear is obligated to work for Min to make amends for the accident. He works diligently for the gruff old potter, collecting wood for the local kiln and retrieving and preparing clay for his master. Min's work is so admired that the king's emissary has requested a sample to be considered for a royal commission. Tree-ear, being young and in good health, travels by foot the long distance to the royal court to present two of Min's beautiful prune vases to the emissary. Along the way he is confronted with challenges both frightening and rewarding, which ultimately change his life and the lives of those around him. This moving story captures a moment in Korean history when the mystery, magic and fortitude of true artisans were valued as they dedicated their lives to create things beautiful to behold.
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