Elizabeth Quan’s father had made a success in the New World, but he longed for his home in China. So in the early 1920’s, he and his family set out on an arduous trip to the far side of the world. By train, ship, ferry, cart, and on foot, Elizabeth, her parents, and her brothers and sisters set off from Toronto to a village in China to visit the grandmother they have never met.
From the mountain of luggage to the whales breaching in the Pacific and geishas on wooden sandals on the cobbled streets of Yokohama, Elizabeth Quan describes sights that would captivate any child. But hers is also a journey of personal discovery. Did she fit in in Canada, where her straight dark hair and even the foods she ate set her apart? Would she fit in in China where she was just as different to the people she met?
In the course of her family’s travels she learns that home is a state of mind and that the moon can find us, no matter where we are.The rhythms of travel and the longing for connection are conveyed in lyrical text and lovely watercolors in a truly memorable book.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
About the Author:
Elizabeth Quan is a Canadian watercolorist active in the art scene both nationally and internationally, and has been for over 25 years. She is known for her vital and organic impressionistic works which are included in hundreds of private and corporate collections. She was the last protégé of Jack Pollock. Elizabeth holds a BA in East Asian studies from the University of Toronto, and was connected with the Chinese Gallery at the Royal Ontario Museum for six years. She has published two books: Quan, My Life My Art, and The Immortal Poet of the Milo — three Chinese puppet plays. She was an active puppeteer for many years. She is widowed with three grown daughters and lives in Toronto.
From Booklist:
In this memoir, Quan takes readers along on a childhood journey in the late 1920s, when her Chinese Canadian family traveled around the world to her grandmother's home in China. The parents and six children crossed Canada by rail and boarded a ship bound for Tokyo and then Hong Kong. They took a rickshaw across town, a ferry to the Pearl River, and a train to the village, where they disembarked and walked through rice fields to their grandmother's house. Helping readers imagine different countries so long ago, the text tells of Quan's childlike reactions to her many new experiences and to the grandmother she meets for the first time. The watercolor illustrations offer windows on the world as seen through a child's eyes. Each two-page spread carries a full-page painting facing a page with several paragraphs of text and sometimes another small watercolor, all art done in a naive style that suits the tale of a young traveler. A fine memoir for middle-grade students. Phelan, Carolyn
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
- PublisherTundra Books
- Publication date2007
- ISBN 10 088776813X
- ISBN 13 9780887768132
- BindingHardcover
- Edition number1
- Number of pages48
-
Rating