Curiosity about the world makes better citizens of us all. The price of a
book, or trip to the library, is a first class ticket to stories that bring
children as close as they can get to actually growing up in Brazil, China,
Cambodia, Nigeria, Mexico, South Africa, Eastern Europe, or Western Asia.
From fairy tales to autobiography and from legends to history the books
recommended below offer children a tour of countries real and imagined.
Traveling Man: The Journey of Ibn Batutta 1325-1354
Ages: 4 - 8
yrs.
By: James Rutherford
Houghton Mifflin, $16.00 (Hardcover)
How better to involve your child in geography, history, and the art of
picture books than through the pages of a masterfully-told story about one
of the world’s most famous travelers? Ibn Batutta’s journey represents one
of the first travel diaries we have; author/artist Rutherford takes young
readers along on this trip through space and time.
The Travels of Benjamin of Tudela: Through Three Continents in the
Twelfth Century
Ages: 4 - 8 yrs.
By: Uri Shulevitz.
Farrar Straus and Giroux, $17.00 (Hardcover)
Less well known but equally impressive as a world traveler is Benjamin of
Tudela, who hit the road a century before Ibn Batutta. Here, Shulevitz
displays the wonders of the 12th century world through story and art. The
book is full of tales and anecdotes and information, conveying excitement
as well as education to its young readers.
Calavera Abecedario: A Day of the
Dead Alphabet
Ages: 4 - 8 yrs.
By: Jeanette Winter
Harcourt, $16.00 (Hardcover)
This colorful book stars a lot of calaveras, or skeletons. Or rather, it
stars the family that makes the skeletons for the fiesta el Dia de los
Muertos in Mexico (“el Dia de los Muertos” is what Americans call
Halloween). The design is outstanding; crisp flat colors and black
backgrounds highlight the skeletons. When the pick-up truck packed with
calaveras heads for the festival, the alphabet begins - skeletons in every
frame, humorously clad as mariachis or zapateros. The story is warm and
informative; the illustrations and design are unusual and original.
Red Scarf Girl: A Memoir of the Cultural Revolution
Ages: 9 - 12 yrs.
By: Ji Ji Liang
Harpertrophy, $6.99 (Paperback)
Books about China’s Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s-1970s fall,
generally, into two categories: memoirs by those who participated, for
example as young Red Guards, or by those who were victimized, such as
descendants of landlords and intellectuals. Ji Ji Lang, falls into the
second category and her story of the confusion and fear of those times is
conveyed through a child’s perspective. Why should your child read a book
about growing up under a totalitarian society? Why not? Ignorance isn’t
bliss—it’s dangerous.
I also recommend Da Chen’s China’s Son and Chun Yu’s Little
Green. And, for young adult readers, Anchee Min’s Red
Azalea.
The Clay Marble
Ages: 9 - 12 yrs.
By: Minfong Ho
Farrar Straus and Giroux, $5.95 (Paperback)
and
Goodbye, Vietnam
Ages: 9 - 12 yrs.
By: Gloria Whelan
Dell Yearling, $5.50 (Paperback)
These two novels realistically and sympathetically relate the stories of
Southeast Asian refugees, Cambodian and Vietnamese respectively. The
protagonists are pre-teen girls who, along with their families and
neighbors display tremendous courage throughout the turmoil of war - loss
of family, stress within families, modern-day pirates. Both stories end
happily enough, with the main characters eventually winding up where they
want to be: back in Cambodia after time in a Thai refugee camp, or in the
USA as new immigrants. The student sitting next to your child in his or her
classroom might very well have a similar story.
The Lady Grace Mysteries
(Series, Five Books So Far)
Ages: 9 - 12 yrs.
By: Patricia Finney
writing as Lady Grace Cavendish
Random House, $6.95 (Paperback)
Lady Grace Cavendish is the Nancy Drew of the Elizabethan Age, an
independently minded teenager whose godmother just happens to be Elizabeth
I. Court intrigues and rivalries, swashbucklers, unlikely friends, and a
mystery in each book make these very lively historical novels.
My Friend the Painter
Ages: 9 - 12 yrs.
Lygia Nunes
Harcourt, $5.00 (Paperback)
With great sensitivity, through the voice of a young boy, Nunes relates
the effects of military dictatorship in Brazil some decades ago. The book
is not a rant; it is a thoughtful exploration of the protagonist’s feelings
and discoveries as he comes to grip with his family and with the suicide of
his neighbor, and friend, the painter.
The Whale Rider
Ages: 9 - 12 yrs.
By: Witi Ithimaera
Harcourt, $8.00 (Paperback)
With much information about New Zealand history, and the gender roles and
tribal beliefs of the Maoris, this is a fantasy-tinged, energetic novel
about a girl and her whale.
Haroun and the Sea of
Stories
Ages: 9 - 12 yrs.
By: Salman Rushdie
Penguin, $14.00 (Paperback)
Rushdie’s only children’s book, begins somewhere in Western Asia. Drawing
upon the folklore of India and Muslim cultures, the story takes its father
and son heroes on a quest from our contemporary world into a magnificently
conceived “other” world. In the real world, Rashid Khalifa, the father, has
lost his remarkable ability to tell stories, earning the moniker the Shah
of Blah. Simultaneously, in the fantasy world, stories are disappearing
from the Sea of Stories. Haroun, Rashid’s son, searches for the mysterious
cause of his father’s loss and remedy to restore his talent, he encounters
situations and characters of great originality, humor, and imagination in a
fast-moving tale full of word play and clever dialogue.
Stories for Children
Ages: 4 - 8 yrs.
By: Isaac Bashevis
Singer
Farrar Straus and Giroux, $14.00 (Paperback)
Set in the Eastern European Yiddish culture of his own childhood in
pre-WWII Poland, these thirty-four stories range from masterful refinements
of pure folklore, as with the Fools of Chelm and Shlemiel Family stories,
to poignant original tales, such as “Zlateh the Goat,” “Naftali the
Storyteller and His Horse, Sus,” and “Menaseh’s Dream.” Several of Singer’s
picture books’ texts are also included, among them Mazel and
Shlimazel and Why Noah Chose the Dove, as are vivid
autobiographical tales about Singer’s animated, argumentative household. A
whole world—now vanished—is contained within the covers, a world of warmth,
silliness, pain, and wonder.
Chike and the River
Ages: 4 - 8 yrs.
By: Chinua Achebe
Cambridge University Press, $7.00 (Paperback)
Like Rushdie and Singer, Achebe is known primarily for his books for
adults, such as Things Fall Apart. In this book about growing up
in Nigeria, Achebe’s story is about a boy named Chike and triumphs and
trials as he moves from a village to a town.
Kaffir Boy: The True Story of a Black Youth’s
Coming to Age in Apartheid South Africa
Ages: 9 - 12 yrs.
By:
Mark Mathabane
Free Press, $15.00 (Paperback)
Mathabane’s autobiography is testimony to living in a brutal, bigoted
society. Intended for older readers, this story informs first-hand about
the unpredictable attacks and sheer madness of Apartheid and a government
that is now, fortunately, historical. The author eloquently rises above the
suffering inflicted by the secret police on his family and friends giving
readers a story that powerfully portrays personal ingenuity and
courage.
About the Author
Alida Allison is a founding member of San Diego State
University's National Center for the Study of Children's Literature and a
professor in the Department of English and Comparative Literature, where
she happily specializes in children's and adolescent literatures. Her
published work includes The Toddler's Potty Book and, on the
scholarly side, books and articles about refugee literature, humor,
fantasy, and authors I.B. Singer and Russell Hoban.

Bookshelf Travels
Bookshelves offer starting points for many a
journey. If you’ve ever wondered what life is like in Freedom, Georgia, on
a ranch in Nevada, or on Blossom Street in Marshall County Mississippi,
take a trip through the pages of these Parents’ Choice recommended books
available at your local library.
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