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28 Reviews
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29 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Tale for All Ages,
By
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
Wabi Sabi is a charming tale of deceptive simplicity. A cat's search for identity takes readers on a journey through lavishly illustrated landscapes punctuated by thought-provoking haiku. The discovery at the end of the journey has the impact of a true epiphany or "satori," a breakthrough to understanding and enlightenment that will resonate with older readers but is easily accessible to children as well. A rare gem--and a lovely gift!
95 of 106 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not to be confused with "wasabi",
By
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
Credit author Mark Reibstein with this much. He sure doesn't shy away from trying to teach kids complex philosophical concepts. Here he is writing his very first picture book and does he select something easy like being the new kid in school or losing your first tooth? No, Reibstein decides to write a book about the ancient Chinese concept of wabi sabi (later adopted by the Japanese), working in thoughts on Taoism, haiku, and even the works of Basho on the sly. Paired alongside the remarkable Ed Young's artwork, the final product is a quiet, deep, moving story that may require a special audience, and yet has many uses.
One day Wabi Sabi the cat overhears his mistress discussing his name with a pair of visitors. When asked what "wabi sabi" means, the young woman replies, "That's hard to explain." Curious, Wabi Sabi sets out to find the true meaning of her name. Each creature she asks explains how difficult a concept it is to explain, and they often end their thoughts with a little haiku (each one describing wabi sabi in some manner). It isn't until the cat meets a wise monkey and partakes of tea in a plain and beautiful bowl that the phrase begins to take on a real meaning. Wabi sabi is the feeling you get when you find harmony in the imperfect that is beautiful. Stopping at a temple on her way home, Wabi Sabi creates poems in its honor and truly understands her name by the time she meets up with her mistress once again. The book bears some surface similarities to Jon Muth's Zen Shorts, though the tone feels a bit different. In both cases, however, you find yourself wondering idly about audience. The idea of a cat searching for the true meaning of its name is something kids will grasp easily. But with the added haiku in the text, the book appears to be aimed at older children. Maybe if a school had a class assignment on haiku this would make for a natural companion piece. Normally when a child has to learn about haiku they are handed a book of poems that are separate from one another. A title like If Not for the CatIf Not for the Cat by Jack Prelutsky is fun for kids but doesn't always make plain haiku's power to set a moment in time apart from the busyness of life. What Wabi Sabi does is to place these haikus within the context of a larger tale. When that happens, the little sayings and moments are set apart. They are shots of quietude in the midst of a busy narrative. As a result, the entire book has a kind of calming effect on the reader. Whether that effect will touch children as often as it touches adults remains to be seen. I wouldn't call my relationship to Ed Young's work a love/hate relationship because I've never really hated anything he's done. I just feel that his art varies to a great and grand degree. When Ed Young created Lon Po Po it was justly given a Caldecott Medal for a title that was inarguably the greatest children's art of that given year. Lon Po Po was a triumph. Since then Mr. Young has done personal tales like My Mei Mei and grand sweeping visions with eclectic techniques as in Beyond the Great Mountains. These are all fine and good but few have them have really touched me in any way. Really, I haven't found an Ed Young book I really liked since I, Doko. Wabi Sabi, however, grabbed my attention. It could have been another run-of-the-mill book, but there's something extra here. Something special. Maybe it's wrapped up in the story of these illustrations' creation. Here is the true story behind the pictures you will see in Wabi Sabi. When Mr. Young was asked to create the art for Reibstein's book he produced a series of beautifully simple images. When the pictures were done he went to visit his editor (or was it his agent?) and left the images on the front porch of the home. When he went outside again to retrieve them, they were gone. Poof! "It was a wabi sabi moment," says Mr. Young. And rather than bemoan his fate, curse the heavens above, and fall into a funk, Young resolved to make the pictures again, "and make them better." The result is what you hold in your hand now. Rather than use the same style (and this really was a case of starting over from scratch), Young went in a new direction. They'll call this artistic style mixed media and I guess that they aren't wrong, but there's something about Young's combinations here that gets at the heart of the story better than any random smattering of pulp on paper could. The epilogue to this tale is that six months or so after the disappearance of the art, it reappeared anonymously at a local church and was returned to Young's possession. And if you do a side-by-side comparison of Young's first try and subsequent re-illustration one thing is patently clear. The new images are better than the originals. Just as Ed Young said they would be. To talk a little more about the art, can I confess to you that I'm not actually a fan of collage? I'm not. I have nothing against pasting random bits and pieces together in the hopes of creating something new and different, but it's not my favorite style in the whole wide world. And so the single most impressive and interesting image in this book is not, to my mind, the cat or the creatures he encounters but in fact the photograph that lurks behind the publication information at the end of the book. It's a shot taken in low lighting of what appears to be a stone garden. The sand is even, possibly after a recent rain, but breaking it up natural as you please is a set of small and precise cat footprints. The combination of perfect smooth surface and the playful remains of kitty feet is what this book is all about. The perfection of imperfection. It is not an easy book to describe. I keep trying to give you some vast sense of the whole, and instead I keep finding myself returning to descriptions of single moments. How could I review this book without mentioning the image of Wabi Sabi staring out over a busy city at dusk? Young perfectly captures in a visual sense the accompanying haiku's description of the darkening city, "before the shock of new light", that will come with electricity. I was particularly intrigued to find that though I started the book by imagining that it took place in the past (Wabi Sabi's mistress wears a kimono), the shot of the city places it squarely in the present. This is not a jarring realization, however, and few will have any problems with it. If people dohave any difficulties with the book, it may lie in the design. Wabi Sabi is a vertical book. To read it, you must turn it so that the pages move from down to up rather than from right to left. Some people find such books too difficult to read to children though, if Tops & Bottoms by Janet Stevens is any indication, this is something adults object to. Not children. If you find the song Simple Gifts running through your head, do not be surprised. Heck, you could even pair this book with Chris Raschka's picture book Simple Gifts for a cat-related, simplicity-centric storytime. Concept books are hard enough when you're trying to teach a kid why sharing is bad or why homemade things have more meaning than store bought. Trying to teach kids about why the simple and plain are also beautiful is a task few would willingly select. Reibstein and Young, however, have hit upon the one way it can be done. I suspect that the world will recognize their achievement accordingly. Highly recommended.
27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Illuminating and Delightful!,
By
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
I was so charmed by this gorgeous book, I bought copies for all my nieces and newphews. All respect is paid to the concept of Wabi Sabi in every nuance, elucidating young and old. The book is laced with Reibstein's haiku as part of the story and haiku in Japanese kanji by Basho and Shiki.
A beautiful gift. I love it!
16 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Zen-themed haiku and accompanying art - marvelous, but misses by a mile its target audience,
By
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
As an adult, former resident of Japan (for 3.5 years), visitor of Ginkakuji, and cat lover, I enjoyed this book with its wonderfully done collages, calming story and accompanying haiku about a cat named Wabi Sabi. But it is more appropriate for a homeschooling parent, poetry teacher, or Japanese culture fan than any elementary-school-aged child I know. My favorite seven-year-old girl bookworm (and cat lover) begged me to stop reading it at about page three. And my favorite nine-year-old boy bookworm and ravenous reader wanted nothing to do with it. Pick it up for your parental reading pleasure at your local library to find out what all the fuss is about. But if you are looking for a kid-friendly picture book about things foreign, you'd do better with: Three Samurai Cats: A Story From Japan by Eric A. Kimmel and Mordicai Gerstein; Bee-Bim Bop! by Linda Sue Park and Ho Baek Lee; or Sagwa, The Chinese Siamese Cat by Amy Tan and Gretchen Schields.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A subtle book that this parent reads most nights to his 3 year old,
By
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
What a wonderful way to expose a young audience to meaningful simplicity. One reviewer said this wasn't a children's book but I guess it depends on the child. Curled up in bed with his dog and his cat my son pays rapt attention to this story. As the reader I was struck by the fact that even the physical pages of the book are thick, I kept thinking I was turning two pages (parents know about one-handed-book-reading), until I realized they had used very thick paper. A nice touch.
If we want our children to see beyond the flashy sound-bite world of TV then we have to give them compelling alternatives. Its never too early to start and this "children's" book is a fine beginning.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Masterpiece,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
Wabi Sabi is a children's book with a universal theme -- the quest for self-identity. This timeless motif in literature is beautifully expressed by the author, Mark Reibstein, who weaves an enchanting tale of a cat in search of the meaning of his name. The synthesis of collage art with simple, lyrical passages of haiku throughout the text gives the reader -- both young and old a taste -- nay a morsel -- of Eastern philosophy as embodied by the concept of Wabi Sabi -- finding beauty in the simple, imperfections of every day life. Buy it, read it and savor it. It will make a wonderful stocking stuffer for the children for the holidays!
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Enchanting Review: Wabi Sabi,
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
WABI SABI
MARK REBSTEIN Art by Ed Young Children's (ages 4-8) Little, Brown ISBN# 978-0-316-11825-5 40 Pages $16.99 Hardcover--Available Now Rating: 4 Enchantments WABI SABI is the story of a cat by the same name, who after hearing a conversation her owner has with friends about her unusual name decides to go out in search of the true meaning of Wabi Sabi. Along the way she asks fellow feline Snowball, Rascal the dog and even wise old monkey Kosho who all share with her their personal meaning of Wabi Sabi, which are all told in beautiful Haiku style. Once she's satisfied with her answers from her friends, Wabi Sabi finally returns home, content with her newfound knowledge. I think WABI SABI is the most unique children's book I've ever seen and one that many will no doubt enjoy. I would say though that this is one children's book that has a higher reading level to it to go along with its message of Wabi Sabi, the art of finding "beauty and harmony" in what is simple. The accompanying illustrations, which are actually collages made from natural and manmade materials, are truly beautiful to look at and compliment the story really well. Mark Reibstein is an English teacher and writer who has lived in New York, California, Hawaii, Japan, and Thailand. Now Mark and his daughter live near San Francisco with their good friend Arlo, who is also a cat. This is his first picture book. Ed Young has illustrated for over 70 books and has been awarded the Caldecott Medal for Lon Po Po and the Caldecott Honors for Seven Blind Mice and The Emperor and the Kite. He lives in upstate New York with his daughters. Lisa Enchanting Reviews September 2008
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wabi Sabi,
By Wendy Williams (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
This is a nice introduction for kids to some of life's grander and more complicated (yet also simple) truths, including the fact that nothing is perfect. Wabi Sabi is an important concept and I'm delighted to see it in this book for kids.
I have been a long time fan of the philosophy of Wabi Sabi since I read the book Living Wabi Sabi: The True Beauty of Your Life a few years ago by Taro Gold, which is a great exploration of Wabi Sabi for adults - although our 12 year old enjoys reading both.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wabi Sabi,
By
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
A cat named Wabi Sabi living in the city of Kyoto, overhears foreigners asking what her name means. Puzzled, she begins to ask all of the animals around her in an attempt to uncover its meaning. Eventually, Wabi Sabi travels to Mount Hiei to ask a wise monkey what her name means. The book alternates between normal text and haiku poems in order to add beauty and wabi sabi, to the story.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Children's book for the soul,
By Ahhling "Ahhling" (NY, NY) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Wabi Sabi (Hardcover)
This is a book for children and adults, a wonderful tale of discovery. The beautiful concept of Wabi Sabi is quietly unfolded in this story, revealing the ancient Chinese/Japanese way of seeing a sort of beauty in the world. It is a wonderful alternative to the fast paced, media driven, technicolor world that most children now live in, it's a perspective and welcome lesson for children and their parents, alike. A simple story with well chosen words, gorgeous visuals and an endearing, sweet Cat at the heart of it, this is highly recommended.
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Wabi Sabi by Mark Reibstein (Hardcover - October 1, 2008)
$16.99 $11.55
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