![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 7 of 7 matches in All Departments
A fun book for parents and children to enjoy and treasure The fairy tales and folklore of China--like stories told throughout the ages everywhere- bring the fantastic world of ghosts and demons into our everyday lives. So it is not surprising that food makes an appearance here- each story is followed by a simple recipe. Chinese Fairy Tale Feasts is a creative book which folds fairy tales into a cookbook of kid-friendly recipes. Most of the thirteen fairy tales included in the book have been adapted and retold from original sources by master storyteller, Paul Yee- a few are original to this text, but remain true to the spirit of the collection. They are accompanied by an introduction by Jane Yolen, one our most celebrated folklorists. The splendid illustrations by Shaoli Wang bring the collection to life.
Set in San Francisco's Chinatown before and after 1906, this novel portrays a young Jackson Leong coping with the ghost of his brother who died in the earthquake, as well as the mysterious ghost of a young woman. Jackson must find out the reasons why the ghosts are haunting the world of the living. If he fails, his family will face disgrace and ruin.
Shu-Li and Diego tells the story of how these two classmates meet the challenge of taking care of Baxter, a neighbor's dog. The two friends face disaster when Baxter runs away and they have to break the news to its owner. Paul Yee is a recipient of Canada's prestigious Governor General's Award for Children's Literature. He lives in Toronto, Ontario. Shaoli Wang is the illustrator of Paul Yee's Bamboo, a finalist for the Christie Harris Illustrated Children's Literature Prize. She lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.
This new collection of short stories by Governor General's Award winning author Paul Yee confronts the secret lives of Chinese-Canadian teenagers as they battle with their parents over schooling, carreers, sexuality, religion and integration into North American culture. Once again Paul Yee offers a rare glimpse into the conflicted world of Chinese youth, some of whom are locally born, while others have recently immigrated from Hong Kong, Taiwan and China.
These ten original ghost stories dramatize the tumultuous history
of 140 years of Chinese immigration to North America - from the
poor village men who first cam searching for gold in the late 1850s
to the new immigrants who arrived from Hong Kong in the wake of the
Communist victory in China. As with the award-winning collection,
Tales from Gold Mountain, Paul Yee's stories are fiction by told in
the style of the traditional folktales that were shared with fellow
men in the bachelor halls or with children and grandchildren at
family banquets. But they are also ghost stories, a popular Chinese
narrative form.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
|