From School Library Journal:
Grade 3-6-One day a fisherman sails up an unfamiliar stream and discovers a hidden valley where people live contentedly, having had no contact with the outside world for several hundred years. Enjoying the serenity of the place, the man decides to live there, but first wants to go back home to fetch his possessions. Upon leaving, he is adjured by the inhabitants not to let anyone know of the valley's existence. Though he promises, he does tell a few friends and soon finds himself leading a veritable horde back to Peach Blossom Spring. The markers he had left have disappeared, and so he never finds the place again. Although not noted in the book, this utopian tale is the work of the early Chinese poet, Tao Yuanming (365-427 C.E.). Bordewich omits some extraneous historical references and adds a few minor scenes and some dialogue, all of which make the retelling more cogent and enjoyable for children. His prose is simple and elegant. Yang's dreamy watercolor illustrations, done in traditional Chinese style, suit the text well. An especially fine touch is the subtle use of color to distinguish Peach Blossom Spring from the outside world. A beautiful English version of a long-popular Chinese story.
John Philbrook, San Francisco Public Library
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Publishers Weekly:
In this sophisticated adaptation of a traditional Chinese tale, an impoverished fisherman stumbles upon a secret utopia, but loses his place within it when he breaks a promise to its residents. Bordewich's storytelling is understated yet evocative: "Farmers were stacking hay on curving terraces, bending and folding, bending and folding"; exotic birds with "tiny flutes tied to their wings" swoop down from "strange feathery trees," filling the air with hums and whistles. Chinese- born Ming-Yi brings the traditional culture of his homeland to life with delicate watercolors. His illustrations ripple and waver like reflections in a puddle. Sea and sky change places as endless jade willow trees fade into the skyline and indigo marshes sprout up along the banks of a river. A school of silvery fish, formed out of rapid brushstrokes, darts across a page. A haunting work. Ages 4-7. Children's BOMC alternate selection.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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