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china@hercules
Z.H. Chen
Original language
Chinese
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Free as a Cloud

Rong Yu Bing Bai

Sweetie the myna loves to sing and fly free. But when he is taken from his jungle to live in a beautiful, spacious, but confining new home, he loses all desire to sing. Readers will empathize with all characters in this heartening tale that explores the bonds of love and the importance of freedom.

This is a story about a wild myna who finds himself living in a cage and loses his desire to sing. Although he is well loved and looked after by his owners, Sweetie knows something is missing and dreams of singing once more. Sweetie’s journey from jungle to cage to freedom explores longing and the bonds and boundaries of love, and young readers will empathize both with Sweetie who longs to be as free, and his human family who try to help him and must make a difficult decision.


Bai Bing has published many children's stories in China and has been awarded the Bing Xin Children's Literature Award and the Chen Bochui International Children's Literature Award, among others. Yu Rong worked as an illustrator, designer and art teacher before she moved to Cambridge, England. She received the Golden Apple Award at the Biennial of Illustration Bratislava in 2013. She now lives in a small village on the outskirts of Cambridge.

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Book

Published by Jieli publishing house Co.,Ltd, Beijing Office , ISBN: 9787544849630

Main content page count: 36 Pages

ISBN: 9787544849630

Comments

Originally published in China, this is the story of a wild myna bird who befriends a family, becomes their pet, then is set free once again. The award-winning illustrations by Rong are eye-catching: a mix of very sketchy pencil drawings and bold, thick, cut paper silhouettes, which creates a dramatic contrast on each page. There is very little color, merely well-composed scenes of town life on tea-stained pages. Unfortunately, the story does not match the beauty of the visuals. Perhaps as a result of the translation, the text is stiff and stilted: "Singing is what small birds dream of, and singing makes them happy." Additionally, the story closes with the bird being released into the "jungle," though the pictures contradictorily depict her in some sort of zoo or park, which may confuse readers. VERDICT Libraries with large picture book collections or those with a focus on Chinese literature may want this book for its artistic merit, but for the most part, it is an additional purchase.

Yurong's delightful illustrations lead us into a magical worldwhich is both familiar and extraordinary. Here are birds andanimals of every size and shape living in harmony with people andwith each other; here is the local park, the city street and thebusy riverside transformed into elegant theatrical settings. Yurongtakes a traditional medium - the paper cut-out - and uses it in abeautifully-crafted and thoroughly contemporary way; there is somuch to see in each detail of these lively and expressive images. Full of fun and playfulness, warmth and good-humour, the storyeventually leads - of course - to a happy ending.