Clear and bright A Ching Ming Festival story

Teresa Robeson, 1964-

Book - 2025

"In this story about the Ching Ming Festival, or Tomb-Sweeping Day, a young girl and her Chinese-American family come together to share memories of the past over a delicious feast. In the spring, Lily and her relatives gather for the Ching Ming Festival to honor their beloved ancestors. The day is full of joy and community, but also reverence and remembrance. As Lily zips between playing Chinese checkers with her cousin and helping her grandparents prepare a delicious meal for the family, a second narrative unfolds to reveal the sacrifices her great-great-grandpa had to make to settle in America. Both a tale honoring the efforts of the first Chinese American immigrants and a story of a family coming together, Clear and Bright is a cele...bration of Chinese heritage, cultural tradition, and the ancestral love that spans generations"--Amazon website.

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j394.26951/Robeson
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Children's Room New Shelf j394.26951/Robeson (NEW SHELF) Due May 21, 2025
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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Chinese American family celebrates Ching Ming, a festival dedicated to honoring deceased ancestors. It's spring, and an unnamed child helps ready the house for visitors. As members of the extended family arrive, the young narrator explains that everyone is returning to "the city where Great-great-grandpa Fong arrived long, long ago when people like us were not welcomed." Traditional Chinese characters are deftly interspersed throughout the gently paced narrative as the family gathers, prepares food, plays games, and finally piles into their cars. Low's realistic portrayals of the characters feature blurred borders of color that exude warmth. Eventually they reach the cemetery. As rain falls, they sweep the graves of Great-great-grandpa and Great-great-grandma Fong, while the protagonist's grandparents tell stories of the ancestors. An offering of food is placed on the grave, and family members bow to the headstones and share things that bring them joy--as Robeson notes in the backmatter, Ching Ming isn't "a mournful time, but one of reverence combined with happiness." As everyone feasts, the narrative cleverly notes that now the sky is "clear and bright"--a reference to the literal translation of Ching Ming. Backmatter offers further information on the festival and the U.S.'s Chinese Exclusion Act (subtly referenced in the story itself). A solemn yet loving tribute to an important tradition. (glossary)(Picture book. 5-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.