cover image THE BUTTERFLY'S DREAM: Children's Stories from China

THE BUTTERFLY'S DREAM: Children's Stories from China

Ippo Keido, , illus. by Kazuko G. Stone. . Tuttle, $15.95 (32pp) ISBN 978-0-8048-3480-3

In an endnote, Keido, a monk living at a Buddhist monastery in the Catskills, explains that these linked tales (similar in structure and theme to Aesop's fables) are based on the "Chuang-Tzu" stories, written in China sometime between 369 and 286 B.C., and meant to teach readers to "think and act differently." The subtlety of the Taoist undercurrent here, while it may intrigue some children, may go over the heads of others. In an opening scene, the Aman Chuang-Tzu dreams that he is a butterfly. Several scenes follow, with the butterfly observing and interpreting their meaning. In one, for example, a man trains a fighting rooster for the king. Paradoxically, as the rooster grows less aggressive, he becomes more intimidating. The butterfly opines that "one who is quietly confident and calm has real power and strength, not one who is easily excited." In the conclusion, the butterfly dreams that it is Chuang-Tzu and awakens; shortly thereafter Chuang-Tzu awakens: "Am I Chuang-Tzu dreaming that I was a butterfly, or am I a butterfly who's dreaming that I am a man named Chuang-Tzu?" Stone's (Cool Melons Turn to Frogs) rough-grained watercolors capture Chinese landscapes resplendent with flora and fauna (Chinese calligraphy also appears on many pages). Her foreshortened lines work best on the animal characters and are less successful for the human characters. Ages 4-8. (July)