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Landed
Contributor(s): Lee, Milly (Author), Choi, Yangsook (Illustrator)

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ISBN: 0374343144     ISBN-13: 9780374343149
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux (Byr)
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Binding Type: Hardcover
Published: February 2006
Qty:

Annotation: Based on the experiences of the author's father-in-law, this book recounts a disturbing chapter in Chinese-American history. Because of the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, new immigrants are detained at San Francisco's Angel Island until they are called to take a difficult oral exam before they can "land. Illustrations.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Juvenile Fiction | Historical - United States - 20th Century
- Juvenile Fiction | People & Places - United States - Asian American
- Juvenile Fiction | Social Themes - Prejudice & Racism
Dewey: FIC
LCCN: 2004047216
Age Level: 7-11
Grade Level: 2-6
Lexile Measure: 790(Not Available)
Physical Information: 0.41" H x 9.11" W x 10.95" L (0.99 lbs) 40 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 20th Century
- Ethnic Orientation - Asian
- Cultural Region - Northern California
- Cultural Region - Western U.S.
- Cultural Region - West Coast
- Geographic Orientation - California
- Locality - San Francisco, California
Features: Dust Cover, Ikids, Illustrated, Maps, Price on Product
Review Citations: School Library Journal 02/01/2006 pg. 106
Booklist 01/01/2006 pg. 92
Kirkus Review - Children 03/01/2006 pg. 234
Publishers Weekly 04/10/2006 pg. 72
Bulletin of Ctr for Child Bks 05/01/2006 pg. 408 - Recommended
Hornbook Guide to Children 07/01/2006 pg. 308 - Below Average, With Minor Flaw
Multicultural Review 10/01/2006 pg. 91
Accelerated Reader Info
Quiz #: 105169
Reading Level: 4.9   Interest Level: Lower Grades   Point Value: 1.0
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Sun is ready to leave his village in China for America, the
place known as Gum Saan, Gold Mountain. His father warns
him, though, that passage will not be easy. Because of the 1882
Chinese Exclusion Act, new immigrants like Sun are detained
at Angel Island until they are called to take a difficult oral
exam before they can land - leave Angel Island and go
ashore. On the boat, Sun had studied maps of his village and
memorized facts about his ancestors. But as the weeks pass in
detainment, the map's compass points swirl in his memory, and
Sun worries that he will lose his direction and be turned away.
The oil paintings are rich with historical details in this vivid
recounting, based on the author's father-in-law's experiences, of
a disturbing chapter in Chinese American history.


Contributor Bio(s): Lee, Milly: -

Milly Lee grew up in San Francisco's Chinatown as Mildred Chan in a household where grandparents, parents, siblings, aunts, uncles, and cousins all lived under one roof. She attended Chinese school after the regular school day and spoke Cantonese at home and in the neighborhood. Up until the end of World War II, Chinatown was a small, close-knit community whose members were under pressure to conform to the ideals of Chinese culture.

When she was a child, Milly found few books about children like herself. There were some Asian stories, but they were set in an exotic land of long, long ago. Milly felt strongly that stories of bicultural children and their experiences needed to be voiced, so that they would see their own likeness in books. A retired school librarian who had been very active in the American Library Association, among other professional associations and organizations, she knew exactly what she wanted her first book to be.

Nim and the War Effort is an autobiographical story, but it speaks directly to the experiences of all bicultural children in their struggles to find out who they are. In it, a young Chinese American girl, trying to prove her patriotism during World War II, risks her family's disapproval by leaving Chinatown to collect newspapers for the war effort.

Milly revisits Chinatown in Earthquake. Basing her story on her mother's experiences in the 1906 San Francisco catastrophe, she tells of the family's escape across the burning, crumbling city to safety. With an endnote explaining the details of the quake, and including newly discovered information, Earthquake gives readers a fascinating picture of a city coping with an emergency; it is also a moving tribute to the hundreds of Chinese Americans who lost their homes, and in some cases their lives, in that disaster.

Landed, Milly's most recent book, is also based on a true story, that of her father-in-law and his experiences as a boy immigrating to the United States from China in the early twentieth century. Because of the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, he and other new immigrants were detained at Angel Island, California, where, whether or not they were legitimate sons, they had to pass a difficult interrogation before being allowed into the country. Milly found that the people who had been incarcerated there didn't speak about their experiences because they feared their legal status would be challenged.

Milly was asked recently what her books are about, which set her to thinking that her books have a more common thread than she had realized: "I have thought of them as stories based on my own and my family's experiences. I believe they provide some insight into how we lived within our own culture and how we lived segregated from the larger community. The stories are from the perspective of people outside the mainstream who have been left out of the stories of the times, in our case, of World War II and the San Francisco earthquake and fire. Chinese Americans were part of those events; their experiences were just a bit different from other American stories of the period. I wanted to let readers know that 'we were there, too' . . . When I talk with school groups, minority students such as the Hispanic school population are often surprised that other people faced these issues as well. I feel it's important for them to know that and to know that they are not singled out, that their immigration problems are similar to those of other groups who have wanted to come to America. Teachers have told me that my books have helped to open discussions on racism with their students."

Since she retired in 1991, Milly, besides writing, travels with her husband, Kearn, to many of the places they read about but never dared to dream of going when they were growing up in San Francisco's Chinatown. Milly Lee, the mother of three and grandmother of six, lives in San Francisco, California.

Choi, Yangsook: - Yangsook Choi is the illustrator of Rice Is Life and Nim and the War Effort, as well as New Cat. Born and raised in Korea, she now lives in New York City.
 
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