Yuko-Chan and the Daruma Doll : The Adventures of a Blind Japanese Girl Who Saves Her Village - Bilingual English and Japanese Text
Yuko-Chan and the Daruma Doll : The Adventures of a Blind Japanese Girl Who Saves Her Village - Bilingual English and Japanese Text
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Author(s): Seki, Sunny
ISBN No.: 9784805311875
Pages: 32
Year: 201203
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 22.01
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"Daruma dolls are traditional Japanese talismans of good luck and resilience, often given as a gift to encourage the recipient to persevere in reaching a personal goal. The heartening sentiment behind them is expressed in this story. Yuko overcomes her disability to invent the Daruma doll, inspired by the founder of Zen Buddhism, and rescues her village from poverty through sales of the popular souvenirs. Although parts of the story are based on fact and well-known legend, Yuko's role is completely invented for this book, so readers seeking a traditional tale need to look elsewhere. For those simply wanting an uplifting story that includes elements of Japanese culture, however, this book fits the bill. Children with disabilities will appreciate Yuko, as her cleverness and resourcefulness outshine her physical limitations. […] Brilliantly colored and delightfully detailed illustrations are the true highlight here. The use of bold line gives the impression of woodblock prints and cleverly echoes the broad paint strokes that decorate Daruma dolls.


Pages are attractively laid out, and characters' faces are expressive and slightly cartoonish, holding great appeal for young audiences."- School Library Journal br>"Seki's friendly illustrations supply a wealth of visual information about pre-WWII rural Japan, showing farmhouse interiors, a temple with a rock garden and a schoolroom, and a village festival. His story is a character-building tale about an orphan girl named Yuko, whose blindness doesn't prevent her from participating fully in village life. Lost in the snow one winter day, she realizes that the tea frozen in the bottom of her tea gourd makes the gourd reorient itself when it's knocked over, reminding her of the Buddhist teacher Daruma and his encouraging words: "If you fall down seven times, you should get up eight times!" Sales of the Daruma doll she designs save her village, whose crops have been ruined by a volcanic eruption. With Japanese text that parallels the English on every page, this is likely to find its most enthusiastic audience among students of Japanese language or culture."- Publishers Weekly.


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