全国绘本馆经营交流群:423656 一键加入全国绘本馆经营交流    官方微信平台搜索:ihuiben
邮箱/卡号: 密码: 找回密码
最近开通站点:
台州博诤童书聊城布纹熊金鼎店小童书吧总部太原魔奇树亲子图书馆聊城爱上绘本馆
公告免费送绘本馆网上借 | 幼儿园合作模块已经
猜您喜欢:

Henry and the Kite Dragon 亨利和龙风筝

书号:9780399237270

作者:Bruce Edward Hall (作者), William Low (插图作者)

适合阅读年龄:7-10岁,10-14

出版社:Philomel Books (2004年6月3日)

出版日期:2004-06-01

更多
内容简介

故事发生在20世纪20年代发生在纽约的唐人街。亨利和好朋友塞尔玛在公园帮忙做风筝,遭到一帮意大利小孩子的嘲笑和攻击,亨利是怎么来解决文化差异造成的冲突?

Everyone knows that kids from Chinatown don't go to the park when the kids from Little Italy are there. They're rough, they're big, and they don't like Chinese kids. That's okay-Henry doesn't like them, either. But what Henry does like are kites. He loves them. Even more, he loves to help his friend Grandfather Chin make them, and fly them over Chinatown and the park. But when Tony Guglione and his friends from Little Italy keep throwing rocks and destroying their beautiful creations, Henry and his friends decide enough is enough In this touching story based on true 1920's events, two rival groups of children representing two different cultures come face to face, and when they do, they find they share much more than just the same sky.

编辑推荐

An excellent resource for teaching diversity-and a little urban history as well. -- Kirkus Reviews, starred review

From Booklist
PreS-Gr. 2. Eight-year-old Henry lives in New York City's Chinatown, the "three tiny streets" next to the Little Italy neighborhood. He and his friends love to visit the kite maker, Grandfather Chin, to help him paste and paint the kites, which Grandfather Chin flies from his roof in dramatic swoops, sometimes chasing pigeons. Then some boys from Little Italy begin to throw rocks that destroy the kites. Henry wants to fight, but Grandfather Chin prefers to resist quietly by continuing to fly kites of increasing glory. Finally, Henry confronts the boys, and learns that they keep pet pigeons--the very birds that Grandfather Chin has chased with his kites. Together, the children work out a deal for air space: kites in the morning; pet pigeons in the afternoon. Hall's messages about compromise and tolerance weigh a bit heavily, but, in Henry's young voice, he tells an engaging story about a vibrant community, which is beautifully captured in Low's detailed, dramatic paintings. For more about the neighborhood, suggest Kam Mak's My Chinatown (2001). Gillian Engberg
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

From School Library Journal
Kindergarten-Grade 4–Henry Chu lives in New York City's Chinatown in the 1920s. He loves everything about it, from eating tasty dumplings to making and flying kites with his neighbor, Grandfather Chin. One day when Grandfather's spectacular butterfly kite is chasing a pigeon, Tony Guglione and his friends from Little Italy throw rocks at it and destroy it. Then they ruin his magnificent caterpillar. When they attack Grandfather's dragon kite, Henry and his companions confront them. The children almost come to blows, but when the dragon appears in the sky, again chasing a pigeon, the root of the discord comes to light. Tony and his pals raise homing pigeons, and the kites are frightening their pets. A compromise is reached–kites fly in the morning, birds in the afternoon–and new friendships are formed. Hall's story includes descriptions and details that ground it firmly in time and place, and the plot serves as an excellent vehicle for discussing how seeing things from someone else's perspective is essential for peaceful relations. Low's heavily textured and brilliantly colored kites soar across the pages with energy and grace. This gentle and satisfying tale, which is particularly effective for group sharing, will be widely appreciated.–Grace Oliff, Ann Blanche Smith School, Hillsdale, NJ 
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.