cover image Ming’s Christmas Wishes

Ming’s Christmas Wishes

Susan L. Gong, illus. by Masahiro Tateishi. Shadow Mountain, $18.99 (48p) ISBN 978-1-62972-779-0

Inspired by family stories, Gong looks at Christmas through the eyes of Ming, the oldest child of immigrants in 1930s Northern California. Unwelcome in her school’s Christmas choir, presumably because she’s Chinese, Ming requests a Christmas tree at home, only to face Mama’s disapproval because it’s “not Chinese.” Feeling unmoored, Ming ponders her place in the world. But a trip with her compassionate father into the snowy mountains—and a conversation with her grandfather’s old friends—soon transforms Ming’s perspective, as she learns about the significance of pine trees in her family’s culture and encounters a generations-old altar left by Chinese miners, a powerful marker of immigrants’ resilience in America. Gong’s dialogue-heavy prose is lyrical and deeply sympathetic (about the mountain: “Here, he said, we are not foreigners. Here we are men, a small part of nature’s greatness”). Intricate, warmly washed interiors and expansive landscapes by Tateishi enchant, conveying viewpoints from a variety of angles that effectively highlight Ming’s varying emotions. A historical holiday story that poignantly explores identity and belonging from a less-seen perspective. Ages 5–6. [em](Sept.) [/em]