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A day with Yayah
2018
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On an outing in Nicola Valley, British Columbia, a Native American family forages for herbs and mushrooms while the grandmother passes down her language and knowledge to her young grandchildren. Includes glossary. - (Baker & Taylor)

A cheerful story from a renowned Canadian children's book author and an award-winning illustrator

"Radiant picture book" -Quill & Quire

Set in the Nicola Valley, British Columbia, in Canada's westernmost province, a First Nations family goes on an outing to forage for herbs and mushrooms. A grandmother passes down her knowledge of plant life and the natural world to her young grandchildren. - (Simon and Schuster)

Author Biography

Nicola I. Campbell is a renowned Canadian children's book author. Her books have won many awards, including the TD Book Prize, the Marilyn Baillie Award and the Anskohk Aboriginal Children's Book of the Year. Of Nicola Valley, BC First Nations heritage, she currently lives in British Columbia with her son.

Julie Flett is an award-winning Canadian illustrator of children's books. Her illustrations have also won many prestigious prizes, including the British Columbia Book Prize and the Aboriginal Literature Award. Of Cree-Métis heritage, she lives in Vancouver, BC.
- (Simon and Schuster)

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Trade Reviews

Booklist Reviews

A sparkling spring day with a rainbow-arced sky finds Nikki, Jamesie, and Lenny harvesting wild potatoes, rhubarb, celery, and lightning mushrooms with their grandmother Yayah. Though it sounds like a frolicsome field trip, their day is much more than that. Every day, Yayah teaches the children two new words in Nlaka'pamux, the language of the indigenous people of the Nicola Valley in British Columbia. Nlaka'pamux, Campbell explains, is an endangered language, making the story all the more significant. Yayah teaches the new words in context and emphasizes the importance of pronunciation. Then readers, like the children, must make sure to articulate subsequent word uses correctly. Although a little pedantic, this cheerful story of a spring-day outing ultimately balances instruction and entertainment. Flett's lovely collages add beauty and a fresh, contemporary tone, while the text captures the essence of the young learning from the old. Timeless values, such as gratitude for the earth, are seamlessly integrated. Consider pairing with the similarly themed All around Us (2017), by Xelena González. Grades 1-3. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.

Horn Book Guide Reviews

In the Nicola Valley, British Columbia, where Interior Salishan peoples live, Nikki and friends forage for wild plants with relatives, including Yayah (grandmother). Yayah emphasizes the importance of plant identification and naming in their endangered Indigenous language, Nle?kepmxcmn. Using the text's pronunciation guidance and the glossary, interested readers will learn along with the young characters. Quiet collage-like art emphasizes the land's natural riches. Author's note included. Copyright 2018 Horn Book Guide Reviews.

Kirkus Reviews

A current-day Interior Salish girl named Nikki and her two friends spend a day with Yayah, Nikki's grandmother, learning about edible plants.Nikki and Yayah are tanning a deer hide when they notice a rainbow blooming across the sky. When neighbors Jamesie Pookins and Lenny join them, Yayah asks if the children know which edible plants are ready to be gathered in the spring. They have many answers: wild rhubarb, wild celery, lightning mushrooms, and more. Even though they admit they don't like how mushrooms taste, they want to help Yayah gather. Soon, everyone climbs into Auntie Karen's minivan, and they leave to hunt for plants. As they do, Yayah teaches them which plants are safe to eat and which are not, all the while also teaching them the Nle?kepmxcín words for each plant, too. The dialogue naturally folds helpful pronunciation cues for several of the words into the text, and all words are printed with phonetic pronunciations in the closing glossary. Campbell's (Inte rior Salish/Métis) quiet story weaves botanical facts with respect for the natural world, naming the plants in the Nle?kepmxcín language. Flett's (Cree/Métis) colorful, calming illustrations blend very well with the tone of the text, often gracefully incorporating the pulled-out Nle?kepmxcín in display type. The flowers pop against the dark green grass, the relative smallness of the human figures in the landscape emphasizing their relationship with nature. With modern children learning an elder's wisdom, this makes for a lovely day out. (Picture book. 4-8) Copyright Kirkus 2018 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.

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