When spring comes to the DMZ / Uk-Bae Lee ; translated by Chungyon Won and Aileen Won.
"Grandfather returns each year to the demilitarized zone, the barrier--and accidental nature preserve--that separates families that live in North and South Korea."--Provided by publisher.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780874869729
- ISBN: 0874869722
- Physical Description: 34 unnumbered pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
- Edition: English edition.
- Publisher: Walden, New York : Plough Publishing House, [2019]
- Copyright: ©2019
Content descriptions
General Note: | Translated from the Korean. |
Awards Note: | Batchelder Honor Book, 2020. |
Search for related items by subject
Genre: | Children's stories. Sophisticated picture books. Picture books. Fiction. Juvenile works. Picture books. |
Show Only Available Copies
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Homer Public Library | P NATURE LEE (Text) | 000155367 | Children's Library -- Picture Book | Available | - |
When Spring Comes to the DMZ
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Summary
When Spring Comes to the DMZ
Batchelder Honor Winner, 2020 ALA Youth Media Awards Honorable Mention, 2019 Freeman Awards (National Consortium for Teaching about Asia) Korea's demilitarized zone has become an amazing accidental nature preserve that gives hope for a brighter future for a divided land. This unique picture book invites young readers into the natural beauty of the DMZ, where salmon, spotted seals, and mountain goats freely follow the seasons and raise their families in this 2.5-mile-wide, 150-mile-long corridor where no human may tread. But the vivid seasonal flora and fauna are framed by ever-present rusty razor wire, warning signs, and locked gates--and regularly interrupted by military exercises that continue decades after a 1953 ceasefire in the Korean War established the DMZ. Creator Uk-Bae Lee's lively paintings juxtapose these realities, planting in children the dream of a peaceful world without war and barriers, where separated families meet again and live together happily in harmony with their environment. Lee shows the DMZ through the eyes of a grandfather who returns each year to look out over his beloved former lands, waiting for the day when he can return. In a surprise foldout panorama at the end of the book the grandfather, tired of waiting, dreams of taking his grandson by the hand, flinging back the locked gates, and walking again on the land he loves to find his long-lost friends. When Spring Comes to the DMZ helps introduce children to the unfinished history of the Korean Peninsula playing out on the nightly news, and may well spark discussions about other walls, from Texas to Gaza.