You can see the White Cloud Mountain, if you look hard.
You must climb the spiny kapok tree to get high enough.
Is any tree tall enough to see where Tao's father is?
Chairman Mao asked that "one hundred schools of thought" contend so that "one hundred flowers" would bloom during the Cultural Revolution. But could intellectuals believe that the dictator truly wanted opposing opinions to be voiced in Communist China?
Listen to the beginning of the story here, courtesy of Macmillan Audio, publishers of the audiobook version of A Hundred Flowers, narrated by Audie Award winner, Simon Vance.
Get to know Tao's family and this intriguing, difficult time in China's history today at your local library or independent bookstore.
Should Tao's mother have told him the truth about his father's political imprisonment, or was she right in allowing her young son to believe that papa would soon return to them?
**kmm
Book info: A Hundred Flowers / Gail Tsukiyama. St. Martin's Press, 2012. [author's website] [publisher site] [author video interview]
My Recommendation:
You must climb the spiny kapok tree to get high enough.
Is any tree tall enough to see where Tao's father is?
Chairman Mao asked that "one hundred schools of thought" contend so that "one hundred flowers" would bloom during the Cultural Revolution. But could intellectuals believe that the dictator truly wanted opposing opinions to be voiced in Communist China?
Listen to the beginning of the story here, courtesy of Macmillan Audio, publishers of the audiobook version of A Hundred Flowers, narrated by Audie Award winner, Simon Vance.
Get to know Tao's family and this intriguing, difficult time in China's history today at your local library or independent bookstore.
Should Tao's mother have told him the truth about his father's political imprisonment, or was she right in allowing her young son to believe that papa would soon return to them?
**kmm
Book info: A Hundred Flowers / Gail Tsukiyama. St. Martin's Press, 2012. [author's website] [publisher site] [author video interview]
My Recommendation:
Perhaps Tao can see where his father has gone if he climbs the
tallest tree in their Guangzhou courtyard. Instead his fall breaks his leg, but
doesn’t break the Communist Party’s iron grip on his homeland, doesn’t bring
Father home, doesn’t stop schoolmates from taunting that Father is a traitor.
If Chairman Mao’s call “let a hundred schools of thought
contend” to be believed, then intellectuals like his papa Sheng and grandfather
Wei would be safe to express their opinions, even if contrary to Communist
doctrines. But a letter from their courtyard house to the Chairman results in papa’s
departure, and mama won’t tell seven-year-old Tao where he has gone.
As Tao’s badly broken leg heals, he is often visited by
Auntie Song who lives downstairs, by his grandfather who tells stories of olden
times, and always by his mother, whose herbal remedies are renowned throughout
the city. Into the courtyard house, Mother invites a lost teenage girl, a
pregnant runaway grateful for small kindness and an empty corner.
Visits to the police to explain that Sheng must come home
after his son’s terrible accident were useless; letters arrive from the re-education
center rarely. Why did the Party think that making a teacher work in a
dangerous stone quarry would change anything?
Finally grandfather Wei decides that he must take the grueling
train journey north alone to see for himself that Sheng is still alive and try
to convince the officials to let him come home.
A fascinating cross-generational tale, told through the
voices of the residents of Tao’s courtyard house during the Cultural Revolution
which crushed China’s artistic and intellectual communities, rippling like an undercurrent in its society even today. [Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.]
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