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Shanghai Messenger | 
enlarge | Author: Andrea Cheng Creator: Ed Young Publisher: Lee & Low Books Category: Book
List Price: $18.95 Buy New: $7.47 You Save: $11.48 (61%)
New (31) Used (14) Collectible (3) from $0.43
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 629337
Media: Hardcover Reading Level: Ages 9-12 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 40 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 9.6 x 7.6 x 0.5
ISBN: 1584302380 EAN: 9781584302384 ASIN: 1584302380
Publication Date: August 11, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available
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Snapshot poems reveal joys and challenges of exploring and connecting with one's full cultural heritage February 9, 2007 11-year-old Chinese-American, Xiao Mei, is invited to visit her extended family in China. Initially uncertain about traveling alone to a place where she speaks little of the language, Xiao Mei impulsively accepts after her grandmother, Nai Nai (who lives with Xiao Mei) sketches their family tree. En-route to Shanghai, Xiao Mei finds a note from Nai Nai thanking her for being her "messenger." Ultimately, Xiao Mei is a courier in both directions, as she also carries gifts and messages of affection from the Chinese relatives back home to Ohio.
"Shanghai Messenger" is told through a set of 30 prose poems, each a page or two long. The poems form a single, narrow column on each page, vertically bordered on both sides with airy orange lattices reminiscent of rice-paper screens, and set off by small ink, pastel and charcoal drawings by Ed Young, the 1990 Caldecott Award-winning artist, who himself grew up in Shanghai. With plenty of white space to balance the concise text and decorative borders, the pages feel clean and open, yet attractive. There is also one double-spread centerfold illustration, and the cover picture, which is not repeated inside the book. The poems serve as sequential "snapshots": those about Xiao Mei's experiences in Shanghai particularly resemble travel album photos, offering colorful images of her arrival, and of such everyday and "tourist" activities as making wontons, visiting public gardens with historical family significance, participating in the community Tai Chi morning exercise routine, visiting a school, and doing laundry as the Chinese do. Not all is without challenge. At one point, Xiao Mei gets ill, as travelers often do. She is troubled by the unfamiliar Chinese remedies offered, until she finds relief and comfort in eating rice porridge cooked just as Nai Nai would make it.
Several events lead Xiao Mei to reflect on and better understand her Chinese-American identity as Xiao Mei/May Johanson, "half Chinese/half not...half and half/everywhere/in the world." She learns, for example, that one aunt is commenting admiringly (not negatively as Xiao Mei assumes) on Xiao Mei's curly hair while braiding it. She experiences being stereotyped by her Auntie Ting, who wrongly assumes that Xiao Mei has visited New York and likes Jell-O. She can't fully bridge the gap between herself and a Chinese schoolgirl, yet takes pleasure in being unexpectedly accepted as "Big Sister" by a small boy who understands her halting Chinese. Back home again, it's clear from Xiao Mei's conversations with her family there that her perspective about their extended Chinese family has grown wider and more appreciative. Her mailed "thank you" to the Chinese relatives represents a sincere, freshly-significant connection.
Andrea Cheng subtly, but skillfully, reveals realistic information about present-day China. For example, Shanghai's population pressures are suggested through Xiao Mei visiting a cousin in a 21st floor apartment, encountering bamboo scaffolding and building cranes multiple times as she moves around, and wondering will happen to an old lady, child, and goldfish living in a traditional courtyard house about to be bulldozed. Differences between typical Chinese and American standards of living are suggested through seeing her aunt cook elaborate meals on a hot plate in a stairwell, and noting her cousins' thankfulness for access to a tiny clothes dryer in their apartment hallway (used to dry laundry carried through the rain on the back of a moped!) Xiao Mei experiences shopping in China (not in a mall!) for both a live duck, and for a computer for her cousin. She experiences greater reliance on shared transportation than would be typical in Ohio: besides her plane trip to and from Shanghai, she travels by crowded van, foot, moped, subway and bus in the context of routine activities with her relatives. There is even a glance back at history as a cousin briefly describes eight "wasted" years of "re-education" during the Communist era. All of these details suggest contrasts between China and the U.S. in a matter-of-fact, accepting way; there's a lot of information, sometimes perhaps too much to be meaningful to a young reader with little background knowledge, packed into 30 poems.
The plot of "Shanghai Messenger" is driven more by description than action, but, in a gentle, inviting way, this narrative-in-verse gives a glimpse of modern urban Chinese life through the eyes of a pre-teen accustomed to life in America. It also offers encouragement for those of bi- or multi-cultural identities to enrich their self-understanding by exploring and connecting with unfamiliar parts of their family background and culture. As a teacher of English for Speakers of Other Languages, I look forward to perhaps using this book with, or recommending it to, some of my English language learners.
A gentle and encouraging book about learning to appreciate differences, as well as the roots of one's family history October 4, 2005 Shanghai Messenger is a book of poetry by Andrea Cheng and pictures by Ed Young describing an eleven-year-old girl's trip to visit her extended family in Shanghai, China. Half-American, half-Chinese Xiao Mei is both excited and fearful as she sets foot in a strange land, yet the words of her grandmother - to look about herself and remember - reverberate in her heart. Bit by bit she comes to understand a different way of life and appreciate her Chinese heritage. She experiences everything from traditional braids to Tai Chi to making wontons and meeting her relatives for the first time. At last the day comes when she has to return home, full of precious memories to share with Grandma Nai back in the States. A gentle and encouraging book about learning to appreciate differences, as well as the roots of one's family history. Making Wontons: Auntie chops the onions / so fine / with her big knife / moving fast. / Pork, green onions, / each wrapper gets a bit, / the fold the thin dough / and pinch tight. / My wontons are too fat. / One cracks, / but Auntie says, "Hen hao Xiao Mei." / Very good. / At the end / there's a speck of meat / left in the bowl. / Auntie unwraps a wonton, / careful not to break the skin, / tucks the speck inside / and folds it back.
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