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The star fisher / Laurence Yep.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Morrow Junior Books, c1991.Description: viii, 150 p.; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0688093655 (reinforced trade)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • [Fic] 20
Summary: Fifteen-year-old Joan Lee and her family find the adjustment hard when they move from Ohio to West Virginia in the 1920s.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Juvenile Book Phillipsburg Free Public Library Juvenile Fiction Juvenile Fiction J FIC YEP Available 674891000112021
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

"This poignant, gently humorous novel is about prejudice and acceptance....15-year-old Joan Lee is a child of two worlds. As a Chinese American, she has never felt her separateness more than now, in 1927, in this new place in West Virginia. Only Miss Lucy, their landlord and neighbor, seems welcoming....There's nothing coy about Yep's portrait of prejudice, which he sketches from several angles."--Booklist. "A pleasure to read, entertaining its audience even as it educates their hearts."--Horn Book.

Fifteen-year-old Joan Lee and her family find the adjustment hard when they move from Ohio to West Virginia in the 1920s.

c.1.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Based on the author's own experiences, this Christopher Award winner movingly describes a Chinese American family's adjustment to their new home in West Virginia in 1927 and the prejudice they encounter there. Ages 10-14.

School Library Journal Review

Gr 6-8-- On the first night in their new home in a small West Virginia town, 15-year-old Joan Lee lulls her little sister to sleep with the story of a magical kingfisher who is held captive in human form by her mortal husband, but who is later helped by her daughter. She soon joins her mother in the stars, but is sometimes seen, cometlike, attempting to bridge heaven and Earth. Joan, the oldest daughter of the only Chinese family in 1927 Clarksburg, at first sees only herself in the story's symbols: caught between two worlds. As she braves the curiosity and prejudice of the townspeople, helps bridge a friendship between her mother and an elderly neighbor, and gets acquainted with an enigmatic classmate, she realizes that she is not the only one struggling to find a niche. Joan's story will appeal to any reader who has ever felt excluded, but she and her family seem to hold many more stories begging to be shared. Based on tales Yep gleaned from his mother and her family, whose resilience and humor shine through, The Star Fisher offers tantalizing glimpses of interesting characters, but abruptly shifts focus from a family story with the younger sister as a strong character to a relationship between mother and daughter. Basically, there is too much depth and complexity here to be confined to one book. --Carla Kozak, San Francisco Public Library (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Booklist Review

Gr. 6-10. Based on real people and on stories about Yep's own West Virginia grandparents, who also operated a laundry in a converted school, this poignant, gently humorous novel is about prejudice and acceptance. Like the star fisher in the bedtime story she tells her little sister, 15-year-old Joan Lee is a child of two worlds. As a Chinese American, she has never felt her separateness more than now, in 1927, in this new place in West Virginia. Only Miss Lucy, their landlord and neighbor, seems welcoming. But stubborn, practical Mama, who dresses like the Americans but speaks no English, finds Miss Lucy's overtures humiliating. Joan recognizes Lucy's generosity but can't make a dent in her mother's pride, nor can Lucy break through the coldness that greets her at school--until she teaches Mama how to bake a terrific apple pie. There's nothing coy about Yep's portrait of prejudice, which he sketches from several angles--ignorant Sidney calls the Lees "darn monkeys" and paints racist slurs on their front gate; Joan's classmate Berenice is shunned because her mother works in the theater; and Mrs. Lee thinks Americans are "lazy." Yep's message is clear and strong. So, too, is his depiction of Joan's difficult relationship with her mother, a woman whose strengths and vulnerabilities Joan comes to understand better by the novel's close. ~--Stephanie Zvirin

Horn Book Review

The lovely Chinese legend of the star fisher serves as an analogy to the plight of the Lee family, who in 1927 move from Ohio to West Virginia in search of a better life. A pleasure to read, entertaining its audience even as it educates their hearts. From HORN BOOK 1991, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kirkus Book Review

The author of Dragonwings (Newbery Honor, 1976) draws on his mother's childhood to depict a Chinese family's experiences when they arrive from Ohio to open a West Virginia laundry in 1927. Eldest child Joan Lee is 15; unlike their parents, she and her siblings were born in the US and speak English. Their first two encounters set up the difficulties they will face and how they will be countered: when they step off the train in Clarksburg, ne'er-do-well bigots greet them with cruel taunts; but their landlady, a retired schoolmistress, warmly welcomes and befriends them. Still, ``The Star Fisher,'' a Chinese folk tale Joan shares with her little sister, symbolizes Joan's position even after she gains acceptance: like the child of the selkie- like bird-wife in the story, she sees through two sets of eyes. Yep has shaped his family's stories into a rather old- fashioned novel of small-town prejudice bowing to good will and some humorously applied ingenuity. Joan is provided with another spunky outcast as a friend; pungent family interaction and abundant period details help to complete a vivid picture. While learning to cook, Mrs. Lee bakes a series of inedible apple pies that strain credulity, but they do serve the plot well when she finally bakes a good one and makes a hit at a church social. A likable, thoughtful story about a young woman learning to value her own differences. (Fiction. 9-14)
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