Held traditionally since the early 1800s, coinciding with the ‘Golden Week’ holidays of Greenery Day and Children’s Day, the festival pits Zama and Sagamihara cities against each other as each team tries to hoist their massive kite into the air for the longest possible time. The author/artist’s two-page ending note contains information about historic kite flying in China and elsewhere, and kites everywhere today.A large kite, supported by over 50 members of a local Zama City fire department, takes flight during the Sagamihara ‘Giant Kite festival’ May 4th, 2023. The young narrator adds dragon eyes, and everyone works to attach a noisemaker. Little Mei-Mei uses preschooler’s scissors to do some cutting. “Ma- Ma joins sticks together.” An older child and her father glue paper and paint. It is a good day for kites.” And so a family of Asian heritage gets busy making a kite. Endpapers feature illustrations of the materials needed for building a kite and the symbolic meaning of some kite shapes. An author’s note following the text summarizes the history and significance of kite-flying in the Chinese culture. The bold artwork and simple text with the obvious accompanying activity will interest young readers as they are introduced to this wonderful Chinese tradition. Painted illustrations that seem to be cut from brightly colored origami paper fill each page. Heading out to a windy field, they send the dragon into the air, watching as it dances across the sky, joining dozens of other kites in flight. Finally the family attaches a noisemaker and some string. Ba-Ba glues the paper.” The children take turns cutting the whiskers, painting a mouth, and adding colorful eyes. Beginning from raw materials, each member takes part in the creation of the flying paper dragon. There are added notes on kite-flying in history and today.Ī windy day offers the family from Dim Sum for Everyone! (2002) the perfect opportunity to build and fly a kite. Beginning with the title page, the double pages show the family in action in a flat, decorative style that emphasizes the patterns on the clothes, wall paper, and kite, designed to show the unity of the family as they work together. The front end-papers depict the materials used, while the back papers present ten very attractive animal-shaped kites. They paint and decorate it, then take it out to talk to the wind. What do you think he’s saying?” Two pages of endnotes provide historical and cultural context for this favorite pastime, and clever endpapers display craft supplies and kite shapes.Ī young girl describes very simply, in just a few words, how her family builds a dragon kite together. The close-up perspective will draw little ones right into the project the finished dragon kite flies as if “talking to the wind. The overall simplicity is effective and appealing, and the spare text is accentuated by bright gouache illustrations, in colorful shapes and painted fabric patterns that call up the same strong style Lin used in Dim Sum for Everyone! (2001). Even the girl’s two younger sisters help: Mei Mei cuts the whiskers and Jie Jie paints a laughing mouth. Demi’s Kites: Magic Wishes That Fly up to the Sky (Knopf, 2000) provides even more information about Chinese kites and their meanings.Ī Chinese girl describes how the members of her family come together to make and fly a dragon kite. An author’s note offers a brief history of kite flying. Front endpapers contain supplies needed to build a kite while the back pages depict different kite creatures and the attributes they symbolize. Lin’s signature swirls in the sky along with diagonals of kite string, grassy hill, and kite ribbons and blowing hair, clothing, and leaves combine to suggest the ideal blustery day for this activity. More patterns appear on Chinese-style jackets and slippers and on the bright-red dragon as well. Patterns in the wallpaper and floor that form the background for the brilliantly colored, flat paintings of family members add visual interest. The brief sentence on every spread describes what each family member is doing: “Ba-Ba glues the paper.” “Mei-Mei cuts whiskers.” Young Mei-Mei’s protruding tongue is evidence of her complete absorption in and enjoyment of her task. PreSchool-Grade 3-The parents and three daughters who were introduced in Dim Sum for Everyone! (Knopf, 2001) return this time to shop for supplies and make a dragon kite, which they fly on a windy day.
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