Recently in Events Category

Cross-Cultural Connections through Wakame

| | Comments (0)
Holly Thompson, author of The Wakame Gatherers, reports on a wonderful event she hosted in Japan last month. I'll let her explain:

Recently in Koshigoe, Kamakura, elementary school teachers from the U.S. state of Colorado joined community volunteers for a day to learn about wakame and to visit sites illustrated by Kazumi Wilds in my picture book The Wakame Gatherers. Late last year I was contacted by the Program for Teaching East Asia (TEA www.colorado.edu/CAS/TEA/) and learned that The Wakame Gatherers would be featured in the three-week 2008 TEA study tour--Japan through Children's Literature. A day was scheduled for the selected teachers to join me in Kamakura, and I was to show them around locations featured in the book where wakame is cultivated and dried. Plans for the day formed and reformed and soon came to involve many members of the Koshigoe community. Finally, after months of planning and anticipation, on a Saturday last month I met the fourteen teachers and their three leaders at the tiny Koshigoe Station on the Enoden Line.

We walked down the main Enoden street past the fish shop featured prominently in one illustration and past the old house that illustrator Kazumi Wilds selected as a model house for main character Nanami. We made our way to the port area just east of the Koyurugi headland where in winter and early spring wakame is hung to dry. There we watched the local fishing families preparing shirasu (tiny sardines) for drying and heard a brief talk by a fisherman; teachers had the opportunity to ask him questions about both naturally growing and cultivated wakame and the seasonal work of harvesting. Farther down the beach we gathered around the woman who served as the model for the character Baachan in the book. She was busy raking shirasu over drying screens, but took time out to talk with teachers and generously gave the group heaping platefuls of just-harvested and boiled shirasu. Teachers took photos of the shirasu work, the beach setting featured in the book, and especially the warm and smiling Baachan model. Teachers even took pictures of other teachers holding up The Wakame Gatherers, pointing to illustrated pages that featured the landscape just behind them.

From the beach we walked through back lanes to the Koshigoe Middle School where, following months of planning, over a dozen community volunteers had meticulously prepared for the teachers to join them in cooking various wakame dishes. Teachers donned aprons, the menu was explained and they eagerly gathered around cooking tables to work with the volunteers to prepare miso wakame soup, wakame and seafood sunomono, wakame and tsukune nimono, wakame salad and wakame rice. During the cooking there was ample time for questions, talk and exchange of ideas between the teachers and community members.

The meal was served in an adjacent room where photos of the wakame harvesting process were hung. While eating, we heard talks by a representative of a local fishing family about the history and physical work of wakame cultivation in Koshigoe; by an elementary school teacher about the school's wakame program in which students fix wakame sporelings onto the ropes, set the ropes in the bay and later harvest the wakame; and by a community elder and lifelong Koshigoe resident who spoke of early days in Kamakura and the difficult years during the war--how unthinkable it would have been then, she said, yet how wonderful now for her to be sharing a meal cooked together with a group of American teachers in peace.

On the way back to Koshigoe Station at the end of the day, comments from the teachers included, "That was the best day we've had on the tour!" "Amazing!" "So great to be able to cook together," and "This, today, was the true meaning of exchange."

What more could an author ask for?!

Walter and Wakame Tomorrow at The Storyteller Bookstore

| | Comments (0)
Every year, Walter Mayes, one of the authors of Valerie and Walter's Best Books for Children and best known in some circles as "Walter the Giant Storyteller," gives a talk about his children's book picks for the year. If you are involved at all with children's books in the Northern California Bay Area, you will recognize Walter's huge frame, bright red hair, and bushy beard. (And if you were at Hicklebee's bookstore on the night of the final Harry Potter release, you would have recognized him as Hagrid.)

Walter will be giving his "Best Books of 2007" talk tomorrow night at The Storyteller, an incredible children's bookstore in Lafayette, California. Right in my backyard, as a matter of fact. And I just found out today that one of his picks will be The Wakame Gatherers by Holly Thompson and Kazumi Wilds! Woohoo!

If you're in the area, you should definitely consider stopping by. Walter is a great speaker, and he will surely excite you about all the great books that came out this year.

Walter's Best Books of 2007!
The Storyteller Bookstore
30 Lafayette Circle, Lafayette CA 94549
Thursday, November 8, 7:00-9:00 pm
$10 fee. Reservations required. Call 925-284-3480

For parents and teachers, this evening full of giveaways and great advice is a yearly favorite. Walter will be covering ages 0-12. (Watch for another night of great book for ages 12-18 in the spring.) The Storyteller finds itself overwhelmed by posters and other giveaways, so we hope you'll come down for this event and take away great armfuls.

"Holly Thompson’s The Wakame Gatherers is a marvel..."

-Allen Say

Holly Thompson has lived for many years in Kamakura, Japan, where she has often gathered wakame with her children and observed the harvesting of cultivated wakame. Raised in New England, she earned her M.A. in fiction writing from New York University and now teaches creative writing at Yokohama City University. She writes for both children and adults and is the Regional Advisor of the Tokyo chapter of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. Her novel Ash is also set in Japan.

Kazumi Wilds was born in Tokyo studied art at the Women’s College of Art in Tokyo and at the University of Minnesota. She has illustrated three other children’s books and teaches art when she is not painting. Kazumi now lives in the mountains of western Japan, near the Sea of Japan, with her children, dog, and cats. She remembers her many trips to Kamakura fondly.

Shen’s Books is a publisher of multicultural children’s literature that emphasizes cultural diversity and tolerance, with a focus on introducing children to the cultures of Asia.

Through books, we can share a world a stories, building greater understanding and tolerance within our increasingly diverse communities as well as throughout our continuously shrinking globe.