The green Maowusu

Xuefei Duan

Book - 2025

"Baori lives in a village in the Maowusu Desert. Very little grows there, so young people often move away. When Baori hears that the land wasn't always this dry and that there used to be lots of trees and plants, she wants to do something: she wants to make the desert smaller and the green land bigger. She convinces her neighbors to work together..."--Page [4] of cover.

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Subjects
Genres
Nature fiction
Picture books
Published
New York : Clavis [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Xuefei Duan (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Originally published as Het groene land in Belgium and the Netherlands by Clavis Uitgeverij, 2023.
Silver medal winner of the Key Colours Competition China, 2021.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 22 9 30 cm
ISBN
9798890632241
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Baori lives in the Maowusu, a desert in Inner Mongolia in northern China. War and weather have been hard on the area. As trees were cut down and not replaced, the process of desertification--in which sand takes over arable land--has left many people without the resources necessary for their daily lives. Baori is determined to improve the land. She plants seedlings, hoping they will preserve the soil, but the wind knocks them down. She tries again in a more protected location. This time sheep cause destruction. Baori asks other villagers for help, and working together they fence in the plants. Through a sandstorm and drought, Baori and the others fight to keep the plants alive, tackling each new problem with ingenuity and patience. This inspiring environmental story, based on true events, shows how ordinary people can have a significant impact on their surroundings through perseverance. Full-bleed paintings capture the colors of the changing landscapes, dramatically portraying the vast hills of sand, the multiple planting attempts, and eventually a successful village nestled on green, rolling land.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A remarkably tenacious girl inspires and incites her fellow villagers to turn their desert home into a fertile oasis. Baori lives in a tent village in northwestern China's Maowusu Desert (the word means "bad water" in Mongolian). Difficult conditions--sandstorms, extreme temperatures, drought--force the other villagers to move as "the dry desert grows bigger and bigger, and the green meadows get smaller and smaller." Long ago, the elders tell Baori, their land had been beautiful, "but because of the war and forests being cut down, the land got dry. Many people fled." Baori intends to stay and "make the desert smaller and the green land bigger." Sadly, the seedlings she plants blow away, sheep eat up the young plants, and sandstorms subsume new trees. But a single tree still standing offers enough hope to keep trying, especially when "everyone helps." Baori and her community continue their efforts through the years: "Baori grows older and older, while the desert…gets younger and younger and greener and greener." Golds, browns, and verdant greens dominate Duan's palette, with spreads that bleed beyond the edges, mirroring the desert's vastness; characters are garbed in traditional Mongolian flowing dress and headwear. Originally published in Belgium and the Netherlands and translated from Dutch, this is a radiant glimpse at environmental history--Maowusu is real, its transformation successfully ongoing--into a heartwarming, heroic tale of unwavering persistence. One girl, one tree, one village changed their world. A powerful lesson in the rewards of nurturing nature together.(Picture book. 5-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.