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The Golden Flower

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The syncopated prose of Nina Jaffe draws the reader to the island of Puerto Rico, back before the Spaniards arrived. The island was inhabited by the Taínos, and they called their beloved island, Boriquén. This is their story of how Boriquén came to be.

In the beginning, there is only a giant mountain above a dry plain without water or plants. When a child walks over the flat land below the mountain, he finds seeds dancing in the wind. When he plants the seeds on the top of the mountain, a forest grows on the crest and in that forest, a large golden flower appears. Soon, the boy and his community reap benefits that they had never before imagined.

A joyful creation myth about the evolution of a beautiful island habitat, this picture book, originally published by Simon & Schuster, is also a celebration of the young boy's quest, which encourages young readers, ages 4-8, to respect the gifts of the winds and the cycle of nature that bears fruit for the whole community.

Jaffe's adaptation of this traditional folktale common to indigenous peoples of South America and the Caribbean stemmed from her encounter with a Spanish-language text by Carmen Puigdollers, "Como se formó la bella isla de Boriquén," and research in Puerto Rico.

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    Kindle restrictions
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 1, 1996
      Make room on the folktale shelf for this arresting adaptation of a Taino myth from Puerto Rico. Jaffe (In the Month of Kislev; The Uninvited Guest) spins a colorful story about the coming of water to the desert lands that once made up the earth. And if her prose contains an element of magic, the artwork is full-strength bewitching. Sanchez (Abuela's Weave) produces his best work to date. His patchwork vision of an arid desert is a kaleidoscopic landscape of many colors: burnt sienna, amber, mauve, tones highlighted by spirals of light circling down from a dazzling sun. In this desert, a child finds a seed, and another, and plants his collection on a mountaintop. A forest grows, a lush jungle with a beautiful flower and a great golden ball at its center. This shimmering globe becomes an object of scrutiny--of fear and desire--until two men fight over it and the pumpkin, for that is what the globe proves to be, bursts open, letting forth the ocean. The art sings with joy: swirls painted amidst the thick vegetation, on the chests of the stocky Taino people; a face is carved into the sides of a mountain. This simply told tale reverberates with rich layers of meaning, promising fertility and life even in the driest desert. Ages 4-8.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
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Kindle restrictions

Languages

  • English

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