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A Path of Stars Hardcover – Picture Book, February 1, 2012
| Anne Sibley O'Brien (Author, Illustrator) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
Dara's grandmother, Lok Yeay, is full of stories about her life growing up in Cambodia, before she immigrated to the United States. Lok Yeay tells her granddaughter of the fruits and plants that grew there, and how her family would sit in their yard and watch the stars that glowed like fireflies. Lok Yeay tells Dara about her brother, Lok Ta, who is still in Cambodia, and how one day she will return with Dara and Dara's family to visit the place she still considers home. But when a phone call disrupts Lok Yeay's dream to see her brother again, Dara becomes determined to bring her grandmother back to a place of happiness.
Anne Sibley O'Brien's dreamlike illustrations beautifully complement this fictional story based on real-life experiences. Back matter contains information about the admission of Cambodian refugees into the United States, specifically Maine, after soldiers forced them out of their homeland in the 1970s. An author's note and glossary are also included.
A PATH OF STARS was originally developed for the New Mainers Book Project, part of the Maine Humanities Council's Born to Read program. The Project sponsors high-quality children's picture books created from the experiences of Maine's refugee communities, to preserve and present their cultural heritage and to promote their English language literacy.
- Reading age5 - 8 years
- Print length40 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Grade levelKindergarten - 3
- Lexile measure560L
- Dimensions8.38 x 0.42 x 10.38 inches
- PublisherCharlesbridge
- Publication dateFebruary 1, 2012
- ISBN-101570917353
- ISBN-13978-1570917356
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Dara's grandmother, Lok Yeay, tells her tales of her happy pre-war life in Cambodia, remembering childhood activities such as climbing trees, eating mangoes and stargazing from the platform in their yard. She makes Cambodian food for the family and for special meals at their Buddhist temple. Oil paintings with oil-crayon accents show the woman s memories floating in clouds over images of Dara's family and their home in Maine. The swirling lines and relatively dark palette of blacks and orange are suggestive of her longing. There is brief mention of the war and the survivors trek to a refugee camp in Thailand, where they made an altar for the Buddha with pictures of family members who had died just like the one Dara helps her grandmother make when her brother dies. O'Brien (After Gandhi, 2009, etc.) was commissioned by the Maine Humanities Council to create a picture book reflecting the lives of Cambodian-Americans there, but this moving depiction of the special relationship between a grandmother and a grandchild has broad appeal.
The Cambodian particulars are intriguing, but the satisfaction that a child can also help a grieving adult is what readers will take away from this sympathetic story. --Kirkus Reviews
Dara loves to hear her Lok Yeay (her grandmother) reminisce about her childhood in Cambodia, and they both hope of one day visiting the faraway country and seeing her grandmother's brother, Lok Ta. But not all of Lok Yeay's stories are happy ones; she also tells about losing most of her family in the war and her desperate escape to a refugee camp. When Lok Yeay receives sad news about Lok Ta, Dara calls upon her family's traditions and Lok Yeay's own stories to offer the grieving woman comfort. O'Brien's detailed, affecting text skims over the trauma of Lok Yeay's wartime experience, but young readers will understand the gravity of it just the same. Golden-toned illustrations featuring soft brushstrokes, expressive faces, and warm scenes of Dara's Cambodian American family buoy the story's sadder moments. Commissioned by the Maine Humanitites Council, O'Brien's book includes notes on the author's research, the refugee experience, and Cambodian culture. A loving, intergenerational story about loss and perseverance that feels honest, empowering, and--best of all--hopeful. --Booklist
Commissioned by the Maine Humanities Council, O'Brien (the Jamaica books) pens a tale about a Cambodian-American family, beginning with vibrant scenes of food and celebration, as young narrator Dara shares her grandmother's reminiscences about life in her Asian homeland. "[I]n Cambodia, the air is so soft and warm that the stars glow like fireflies," says Lok Yeay. The upbeat mood changes when Lok Yeay recalls "a day the birds stopped singing, a day the soldiers came." Grandmother's story does not go into graphic detail, but recounts that only she, her brother, and her baby daughter survived to walk to freedom in Thailand. A star motif permeates: the siblings use stars to guide their escape, and Dara, which means star, gently leads her grandmother out of grief when the family gets news of her brother's death. Fuzzy-edged oil illustrations add a comfortable, familial feel that softens the story's sadder elements. However, plenty of bright images are interspersed, and the narrative ends on a hopeful note. Many themes are woven into this book, but the value of family stands above the rest. --Publishers Weekly
Dara loves to hear her Lok Yeay (her grandmother) reminisce about her childhood in Cambodia, and they both hope of one day visiting the faraway country and seeing her grandmother's brother, Lok Ta. But not all of Lok Yeay's stories are happy ones; she also tells about losing most of her family in the war and her desperate escape to a refugee camp. When Lok Yeay receives sad news about Lok Ta, Dara calls upon her family's traditions and Lok Yeay's own stories to offer the grieving woman comfort. O'Brien's detailed, affecting text skims over the trauma of Lok Yeay's wartime experience, but young readers will understand the gravity of it just the same. Golden-toned illustrations featuring soft brushstrokes, expressive faces, and warm scenes of Dara's Cambodian American family buoy the story's sadder moments. Commissioned by the Maine Humanitites Council, O'Brien's book includes notes on the author's research, the refugee experience, and Cambodian culture. A loving, intergenerational story about loss and perseverance that feels honest, empowering, and--best of all--hopeful. --Booklist
Commissioned by the Maine Humanities Council, O'Brien (the Jamaica books) pens a tale about a Cambodian-American family, beginning with vibrant scenes of food and celebration, as young narrator Dara shares her grandmother's reminiscences about life in her Asian homeland. "[I]n Cambodia, the air is so soft and warm that the stars glow like fireflies," says Lok Yeay. The upbeat mood changes when Lok Yeay recalls "a day the birds stopped singing, a day the soldiers came." Grandmother's story does not go into graphic detail, but recounts that only she, her brother, and her baby daughter survived to walk to freedom in Thailand. A star motif permeates: the siblings use stars to guide their escape, and Dara, which means star, gently leads her grandmother out of grief when the family gets news of her brother's death. Fuzzy-edged oil illustrations add a comfortable, familial feel that softens the story's sadder elements. However, plenty of bright images are interspersed, and the narrative ends on a hopeful note. Many themes are woven into this book, but the value of family stands above the rest. --Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
She sat still, and her hands stopped sewing. She didn’t see me or my brother. She was deep inside, inside a sad, sad story.
After a time, she raised her head and began again. “Four years later, we ran from the war. By then I had only two people left—my brother, who is your Lok Ta, and my little daughter, who is your mother. We took turns carrying her on our back, just the way you are carrying your brother."
Product details
- Publisher : Charlesbridge; Illustrated edition (February 1, 2012)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 40 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1570917353
- ISBN-13 : 978-1570917356
- Reading age : 5 - 8 years
- Lexile measure : 560L
- Grade level : Kindergarten - 3
- Item Weight : 14 ounces
- Dimensions : 8.38 x 0.42 x 10.38 inches
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Anne Sibley O'Brien (AnneSibleyOBrien.com) is a children's book writer and illustrator who has created thirty-seven books, some of which she wrote and illustrated, some she wrote, and some she illustrated.
Her first novel, IN THE SHADOW OF THE SUN (A.A. Levine/Scholastic 2017), is a political escape thriller set in North Korea, the first novel for young readers about the contemporary DPRK. A Junior Library Guild selection, it was also named a Bank Street College Best Children's Books of the Year; a CBC/NCSS Notable Social Studies Trade Book for Young People; an International Literacy Association Teachers' Choice; and a Maine Student Book Award Nominee.
Two of her latest books, I'M NEW HERE (Charlesbridge 2015) and SOMEONE NEW (Charlesbridge 2018), are companion titles telling the stories of three immigrant children adjusting to a new home in the U.S. and the classmates who become their first friends. Both titles received starred reviews from Kirkus, and I’M NEW HERE was named to these lists: Kirkus Review's Best Books of 2015; CBC/NCSS Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People 2016; 2016-2017 Maine Chickadee Award Nominee; 2016-2017 Washington State Children's Choice Nominee; 2016 Maine State Library Cream of the Crop; and 2016 Bank Street College Best Children’s Books of the Year.
Other books she’s created which offer contemporary portraits of immigrant families in the U.S., are WHAT WILL YOU BE, SARA MEE? (Charlesbridge), the story of a Korean-American first birthday by Kate Aver Avraham; MOON WATCHERS: SHIRIN'S RAMADAN MIRACLE (Tilbury) by Reza Jalal, which was a finalist for the Maine Book Award, and WHO BELONGS HERE? AN AMERICAN STORY (Tilbury) by Margy Burns Knight. A PATH OF STARS, a picture book she wrote and illustrated about a Cambodian-American family, was commissioned by the Maine Humanities Council and won the Honor Picture Book Award from the Asian/Pacific American Librarians Association.
Picture books she illustrated include JAMAICA'S FIND (Houghton Mifflin) and six other Jamaica books by Juanita Havill; and TALKING WALLS (Tilbury House) and four other titles by Margy Burns Knight , for which they received the 1997 National Education Association Author-Illustrator Human & Civil Rights Award.
O'Brien's passion for multiracial, multicultural, and global subjects was kindled by her experience of being raised bilingual and bicultural in South Korea as the daughter of medical missionaries. She reflects on race, culture and children's books at her blog, "Coloring Between the Lines" (www.coloringbetweenthelines.com). In 2014 she received the Katahdin Award for lifetime achievement from the Maine Library Association.
She lives with her husband on an island in Maine and is the mother of two grown children and a grandmother of one.
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Yet while the story flirts with sorrow and should bring a tear (or more) to the reader's eye, it does avoid any in-depth portrayal of the horrors that racked Cambodia during the 1970s. The illustrations are nebulous and warm, comforting almost, as the grandmother tells of her childhood and then the escape from her war-torn homeland.
The are a few minor caveats. The gender of the children's names seems confused. (Dara is traditionally a boy's name.) And the story is only in English and doesn't include Khmer. But the details are spot-on, down to the parents picking up Thai takeout when they don't want to cook.
Overall, this is an excellent storybook for parents who want to gently remind children that many people suffer from wounds that are not visible. Or perhaps to try to explain why their elders will forever be caught between two worlds.











