From Asghar Farhadi, director of Iranian film, "The Separation," winner of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Film:
"If people around the world try to find the image of one another through the prism of culture, I believe that image would be a more real and a more clear image."
Monday, February 27, 2012
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Announcing My Newest Book
I'm happy to announce that A Path of Stars, a picture book I wrote and illustrated under commission from the Maine Humanities Council, has just been released from Charlesbridge.
From the jacket copy:
"Dara's grandmother, Lok Yeay, is full of stories about her life growing up in Cambodia, before she immigrated to the United States. Lok Yeay tells her granddaughter of the fruits and plants that grew there, and how her family would sit in their yard and watch the stars that glowed like fireflies. Lok Yeay tells Dara about her brother, Lok Ta, who is still in Cambodia, and how one day she will return with Dara and Dara's family to visit the place she still considers home. But when a phone call disrupts Lok Yeay's dream to see her brother again, Dara becomes determined to bring her grandmother back to a place of happiness."
And from Kirkus Reviews: "... this moving depiction of the special relationship between a grandmother and a grandchild has broad appeal. The Cambodian particulars are intriguing, but the satisfaction that a child can also help a grieving adult is what readers will take away from this sympathetic story."
From the jacket copy: "Dara's grandmother, Lok Yeay, is full of stories about her life growing up in Cambodia, before she immigrated to the United States. Lok Yeay tells her granddaughter of the fruits and plants that grew there, and how her family would sit in their yard and watch the stars that glowed like fireflies. Lok Yeay tells Dara about her brother, Lok Ta, who is still in Cambodia, and how one day she will return with Dara and Dara's family to visit the place she still considers home. But when a phone call disrupts Lok Yeay's dream to see her brother again, Dara becomes determined to bring her grandmother back to a place of happiness."
And from Kirkus Reviews: "... this moving depiction of the special relationship between a grandmother and a grandchild has broad appeal. The Cambodian particulars are intriguing, but the satisfaction that a child can also help a grieving adult is what readers will take away from this sympathetic story."
Labels:
a path of stars,
cambodia,
cambodian-american
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
Inspiration in Rome
I spent last week in Italy, with two days as a visiting author-illustrator at the American Overseas School of Rome, focusing on Africa is Not a Country (K-2), The Legend of Hong Kil Dong (8th grade art classes), and After Gandhi (7th grade English). I felt a real connection with this K-12 school community, its wonderfully welcoming staff and multinational, multilingual student body.
The school borders the busy Via Cassia on one side and a green zone of rolling hills on the other - amazing to find in the midst of a huge city. The cafeteria serves Italian food - risotto cooked with radicchio one day, pasta with pesto the next. Best of all, there is a coffee bar in the school, and kind staff members kept bringing me freshly brewed cappuccino between sessions! (Sets a new standard for author visits.)
On either side of the days of presenting, I got to explore Rome, with sights like the Pantheon, the majesty of which no photograph can convey.
And I got to experience - and get stuck in while traveling back from Florence - the biggest snowfall Rome has seen in decades, some say in 55 years!
My host, upper school principal Ken Kunin, shared some of the books he's used as references for faculty training on cultural competency, including Readings for Diversity and Social Justice, in which I found this gem of a passage in a Patricia J. Williams essay on intentional color blindness, "The Emperor's New Clothes" (here's an excerpt):
The school borders the busy Via Cassia on one side and a green zone of rolling hills on the other - amazing to find in the midst of a huge city. The cafeteria serves Italian food - risotto cooked with radicchio one day, pasta with pesto the next. Best of all, there is a coffee bar in the school, and kind staff members kept bringing me freshly brewed cappuccino between sessions! (Sets a new standard for author visits.)
On either side of the days of presenting, I got to explore Rome, with sights like the Pantheon, the majesty of which no photograph can convey.And I got to experience - and get stuck in while traveling back from Florence - the biggest snowfall Rome has seen in decades, some say in 55 years!
My host, upper school principal Ken Kunin, shared some of the books he's used as references for faculty training on cultural competency, including Readings for Diversity and Social Justice, in which I found this gem of a passage in a Patricia J. Williams essay on intentional color blindness, "The Emperor's New Clothes" (here's an excerpt):
"... I do think that to a very great extent we dream our worlds into being. For better or worse, our customs and laws, our culture and society are sustained by the myths we embrace, the stories we recirculate to explain what we behold. I believe that racism's hardy persistence and immense adaptability are sustained by a habit of human imagination, deflective rhetoric, and hidden license. I believe no less that an optimistic course might be charted if only we could imagine it.
What a world it would be if we could all wake up and see all of ourselves reflected in the world, not merely in a territorial sense but with a kind of nonexclusive entitlement that grants not so much possession as investment. A peculiarly anachronistic notion of investment, I suppose, at once both ancient and futuristic. An investment that envisions each of us in each other."
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