Overview
Eighty years before Columbus, China sent ships to explore the world.
The Chinese discovered many marvelous things, but one discovery stood out above the others: the chee-lin.
This chee-lin was just a giraffe, but to the Chinese it was an omen of good fortune so rare that it had appeared only once before—at the birth of Confucius.
In a storybook in which each page evokes the richness of faraway places and long-ago days, James Rumford traces the chee-lin’s journey from Africa to Bengal to China, weaving a tale not just of a giraffe but of the people he meets along the way. Chee-lin is a story for all time: of captivity and struggle, friendship and respect.
Synopsis
Eighty years before Columbus, China sent ships to explore the world.
The Chinese discovered many marvelous things, but one discovery stood out above the others: the chee-lin.
This chee-lin was just a giraffe, but to the Chinese it was an omen of good fortune so rare that it had appeared only once beforeat the birth of Confucius.
In a storybook in which each page evokes the richness of faraway places and long-ago days, James Rumford traces the chee-lin’s journey from Africa to Bengal to China, weaving a tale not just of a giraffe but of the people he meets along the way. Chee-lin is a story for all time: of captivity and struggle, friendship and respect.
Children's Literature
This beautifully done book was inspired by a painting created by the artist Shen Du in 1414 and with information about the Chinese voyages of exploration. The author/illustrator painted the illustrations with casein, which he notes is a poster paint made with milk, and the borders and backgrounds were primarily made on the computer. The chee-lin was a horned beast in Chinese mythology and was considered an omen of good luck. The appearance of the beast was very rare, but in the fifteenth century a chin-lin called Tweega came from Africa. It was actually a giraffe, but the Chinese accepted it as a good omen. The story of the giraffe during its travels touches the heart and keeps the reader enthralled throughout. Tweega meets many people along the way, some cruel, some uncaring, and some who help him in his new surroundings as he is moves from one place to the next. A two-page spread showing his travels appears in the back of the book as does background material. Shen Du's painting of a giraffe is included. A wonderful book for parents and children alike. Reviewer: Carolyn Mott Ford
Editorials
Children's Literature -
This beautifully done book was inspired by a painting created by the artist Shen Du in 1414 and with information about the Chinese voyages of exploration. The author/illustrator painted the illustrations with casein, which he notes is a poster paint made with milk, and the borders and backgrounds were primarily made on the computer. The chee-lin was a horned beast in Chinese mythology and was considered an omen of good luck. The appearance of the beast was very rare, but in the fifteenth century a chin-lin called Tweega came from Africa. It was actually a giraffe, but the Chinese accepted it as a good omen. The story of the giraffe during its travels touches the heart and keeps the reader enthralled throughout. Tweega meets many people along the way, some cruel, some uncaring, and some who help him in his new surroundings as he is moves from one place to the next. A two-page spread showing his travels appears in the back of the book as does background material. Shen Du's painting of a giraffe is included. A wonderful book for parents and children alike. Reviewer: Carolyn Mott FordSchool Library Journal
Gr 1-4
A lovingly created, highly unusual book that will appeal to special readers. Inspired by a painting of a giraffe created in 1414 by Shen Du, a calligrapher of the imperial court of China, Rumford researched early-15th-century Chinese voyages of exploration. Finding only brief allusions to the animal, he created this account of the birth and capture of Tweega (Swahili for "giraffe") and his travels from East Africa, to India, to China. Upon his arrival in Nanjing, the animal is greeted as a chee-lin, a mythological horned creature with a deer's body, ox's tail, and horse's hooves that appears only when there is peace and prosperity in the land. Pages of boxed text are set against computer-generated patterns inspired by textiles of the different countries in which the tale is set (African baskets and cloth, Persian tiles, etc.). Richly colored, thick casein paintings on facing pages show people of the East African coast and of Bengal, the courtyard of the emperor's palace, and the woods of the Peking park that was Tweega's final home. A hand-drawn map shows the chronology of the animal's journey. Shen Du's painting appears at the beginning, and his poem about the chee-lin, printed in Chinese and English translation, is appended along with an author's note.-Susan Scheps, Shaker Heights Public Library, OH