Henry's First-Moon Birthday
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Average customer review:Product Description
Jenny's baby brother Henry is having his one-month birthday -- his first-moon, as it's called in Chinese. And even though Jenny's sure he doesn't deserve it -- all Henry does is sleep, eat, and cry -- there's a big celebration planned for him. Together, Jenny and her grandma get everything ready, from dyeing eggs a lucky red to preparing pigs' feet and ginger soup. And someday, when Henry's old enough to appreciate all her hard work, Jenny will tell him how lucky he was to have her in charge.
The childlike charm of Lenore Look's story is perfectly captured in Yumi Heo's naïve illustrations, which give readers the impression that Jenny drew them herself.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #637812 in Books
- Published on: 2001-04-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 40 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Look's (Love as Strong as Ginger) buoyant picture book invites readers to peek at a Chinese-American family's preparations for a very special party. Older Sister (aka "Jen, Jenny, but never Jennifer"), who professes to be the lady of the house, rises early with GninGnin ("never Grandmother or Granny or Grandma") to get ready for brother Henry's first-moon, or one-month birthday. While the rest of the family sleeps, GninGnin and Jen bustle about cooking traditional Chinese dishes (pigs' feet and ginger soup, eggs dyed a lucky red) and writing good-luck messages in "ink, the real stuff, which GninGnin makes by rubbing an ink pebble with a little water." Soon, Mother joins the team and "cleans like a tornado going through every room." At last, GninGnin and Jen put on their favorite dresses and celebrate with visiting relatives. Jen is an entertaining narrator, a plucky helper filled with a refreshing confidence in her important role in the family. Through her eyes and her childlike, evocative descriptions readers learn more about Chinese culture as well as enjoy a warm, gently humorous story with universal themes. Heo (Yoshi's Feast) matches Jen's perky wit with her whimsical perspectives and energetic pencil-oil-collage compositions. Characters with smiling faces and happy eyes that "look like commas" and tender scenes between family members convey joy on every page. Ages 4-8.
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
PreS-Gr 2-In this cheerful, intergenerational story about a Chinese-American family, Jenny's baby brother is having his first-moon (one month) birthday party. Even though she doesn't believe that he deserves the fuss (all he does is sleep, eat, and cry), Jenny and her GninGnin prepare delicacies like pigs' feet and ginger soup and dyed red eggs for good luck. With pen and ink, they write Henry's Chinese name and good-luck words on red cloth in calligraphy for everyone to read. While her grandmother is cooking, the girl gets into mischief, drawing a spaceship and dinosaur on the floor in ink. Mother cleans like a tornado; Baba fixes the car and picks up her grandfather and the favorite Grandaunties for the party. Jenny and her cousins eat, jump on the beds, and peek into Henry's red gift envelope. When all is done, GninGnin praises her granddaughter, who reflects on the day, deciding that baby Henry is not so bad after all and that one day, he will be glad that she was in charge of his party. Lively, childlike illustrations are rendered in pencil, oil, and collage and emphasize the frantic pace of party preparations. The Matisselike art comes to life through the use of patterns and interestingly shaped objects. Figures are drawn as if by Jenny herself. All in all, the busy pages capture perfectly the happy mood and bustle of Henry's first-moon birthday.
Alice Casey Smith, Sayreville Public Schools, Parlin, NJ
Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Ages 4-8. "Jen, Jenny, but never Jennifer. . . aka older sister" has been in charge ever since her mother had a baby. Her grandmother, Gnin Gnin, has helped out, and now it's time for baby Henry's first-moon birthday party. The celebration is a Chinese tradition, but the family's ethnicity is very subtly portrayed; the emphasis is really on the family story. Jen introduces each step as she helps Gnin Gnin prepare for the party: "This is our kitchen, all ready for us to cook," she says, and, as they write calligraphy messages on good luck cloth, "This is ink, the real stuff." Jen bathes until she's "clean as celery," and greets the relatives in a new dress. When the party begins, Henry gets all the attention, and Jen shows the normal resentment: "I pinch him when no one's looking." It's hard to finally say good-bye to Gnin Gnin, with whom Jen is "a pair, like favorite shoes, side by side." But Jen comes around by book's end, when, glowing and proud, she finds that with Henry, she's forms a new pair, "like matching socks." The words are clear and basic as well as creative (Dad's face is "quillery," for example), and Jen's chatty narration infuses the book with the cozy immediacy that's beautifully picked up in Heo's swirling paint-and-paper collages. Small bowls of noodles, pincushions, armchairs, the clock's numbers, and Chinese dragons riot around each scene, enlarging the story's activity into a joyful, domestic cacophony. Just right for those with new siblings, this will draw most young ones into a delicious blend of warmth and chaos. Gillian Engberg
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Customer Reviews
more info please, and clearly
This is a book about a first moon birthday, which is a chinese/ korean celebration of a one month birthday. I am interested in seeing stories about cultures other than my own. However, I found that this book was all over the place. In one sentence they would be talking about a tradition or meal, next sentence a complete 180, talking about a completely different topic. There are a lot of analogies in this book, and unusual sentences. This is probably a really sweet book for those you can relate to it, first hand. I do not know much about Chinese/Korean traditions. Sentence Example from book, about grandma making dinner,"Her fingernails scrape off the warts on the wood fungus." I needed a little more explanation of what that means, and so did my 6 year old. She wondered why they were cooking warts, wood, and fungus for a special occasion dinner. I liked the book's theme. I love to see books that bridge the gap and help understand other cultures and traditions.
A real winner!
"Henry's First-Moon Birthday" truly captures a an older sister's enthusiasm in helping her family prepare for her brother's 1-month birthday. Though the customs and the family are very Chinese, the emotions in this book are universal.




