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Mai and the Missing Melon

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
2023 Freeman Book Awards “Of Note” title in Children's Literature
An exploration of Japanese food, culture, and history that celebrates the special relationship between a child, her grandmother, and the power of kindness, for kids 3-7, by the author of Japanese Home Cooking, Sonoko Sakai.

This charming story invites the reader on a journey through rural 1960s Japan following a little girl named Mai on the Enoden train, past the oceanside populated with fishers, and to the classic shrine-like home of her grandmother, or obachama. 
Loosely based on an event in Sonoko’s childhood, Mai wishes to share the gift of a sweet muskmelon with her grandmother but loses it on the train along the way. Obachama shares the Japanese folktale of The Stone Buddhas as an example of the power of good intentions to cheer Mai up. 
After the story, Mai hears from the train station master that the melon has been found, and she and her obachama are able to enjoy the sweet muskmelon together.  
This sweet story explores the cherished relationship between a young girl and her grandmother–two great friends despite the age gap–while the expressive art takes the reader through the Japanese countryside, past the sea, bamboo forests, and temples, drawn from the author’s own childhood memories.
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    • The Horn Book

      November 1, 2023
      When eight-year-old Mai gets off the train to visit her grandmother, her obchama, she accidentally leaves behind the delicious-smelling muskmelon she was so excited to share. Sakai's story, set in 1960s Japan, will pull readers in with its colorful and detailed illustrations of lovingly described scenes. When Mai realizes she's forgotten the melon, Obchama knows just what to do. They race back to the train station and search through the various objects at the lost and found: "glasses, wallets full of money, dentures, comic books, a ukulele, hats, and umbrellas...live pet crickets and large beetles in cages and a beautiful goldfish with a lacy white tail in a bowl." The melon isn't there, but the station official says he won't leave until he finds it. Back at Obchama's, Mai begs her to retell a favorite story about six local buddha statues that come to life one snowy night to return a kindness bestowed on them. Moments later, Mai's own kindness in choosing to bring the melon to her grandmother comes back around to her when they get a phone call: someone has turned in the missing fruit! Readers will be drawn into this heartwarming tale as surely as Mai is lured that morning by the melon's sweet aroma, depicted by illustrator Brodeur as a flowery trail that curls through the air beckoning the sleepy girl from her futon to the dining table. Jennifer M. Brabander

      (Copyright 2023 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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  • English

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