Thursday, June 2, 2011

Delicious

Margaret and Raymond Chang (retelling)
David Johnson (illustrations)
The Beggar's Magic: A Chinese Tale
Simon and Schuster, 1997

When a Daoist beggar comes to the small village, it is only a matter of time before parsimonious Farmer Wu is served his just desserts. First to welcome the beggar, the young and the infirm are early witnesses to his unselfish magic. Fu Nan, especially, warms to the beggar's ways. At the August Moon Festival, when stingy Farmer Wu refuses to give the beggar a pear from the cartful he is selling, Fu Nan chooses to spend his kite-money to buy one for him. In consequence, the beggar treats the villagers to a magical, moralizing spectacle grown from a single pear seed. I found Margaret and Raymond Chang's retelling of a strange tale collected by Pu Songling (1640-1715) captivating. Their light touch is matched in David Johnson's illustrations.

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