Mira and Baku
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Description
A Quill & Quire Book of the Year
With the help of a magical friend, a young girl searches for her missing father in this poignant story set during Japanese Canadian incarceration in World War II.
It鈥檚 a week until Mira鈥檚 birthday, and she鈥檚 getting worried. Where is Papa? He has never missed her birthday before. When Mira鈥檚 friend Baku, a creature from Japanese folklore, offers to help, they journey over farmlands and forests, mountains and river mouths, gathering clues to Papa鈥檚 whereabouts鈥攃lues that echo Mira鈥檚 memories and overheard conversations in the camp where she lives with Mama.
Lushly illustrated by up-and-coming illustrator Michelle Theodore, this tender, moving picture book by debut author Sara Truuvert explores the profound impacts of family separation and the different forms comfort can take for a child processing loss.
Further reading on Japanese Canadian and Japanese American internment and a note from the author add to readers鈥 understanding of this underrepresented period of history, making it an instant classic. For fans of Baseball Saved Us, Mira and Baku is an emotional exploration of the power of imagination and hope in difficult times.
鈥淚 highly recommend this poignant, splendid telling, in both words and art, of Mira鈥檚 important story.鈥 鈥Matt Faulkner, author/illustrator of Gaijin: American Prisoner of War (recipient of the Asian/Pacific American Library Association Best Children鈥檚 Book Award) and My Nest of Silence
Awards
- Joint winner, Book of the Year, Quill & Quire 2023
- Joint winner, Best Books for Kids & Teens, *starred selection, Canadian Children鈥檚 Book Centre 2024
Reviews
鈥淚n her premiere picture book, Mira and Baku, author Sara Truuvert has created an honest and sensitive story of a Japanese Canadian child imprisoned along with her family because of their race during the Second World War. With graceful prose, the author shares a pivotal and painful moment in Mira鈥檚 life鈥攊t鈥檚 her birthday, her father is absent, and she doesn鈥檛 know why. As her birthday approaches and the pain and anxiety grows regarding her missing father, Mira turns to her love of nature in the rocks which she and her father have collected. And she turns, as well, to her trusted friend, Baku. Together Mira and Baku soar up and out of the impossible confines of their prison camp and into the freedom of imagination, searching for her father. The detailed and subtle illustrations by artist Michelle Theodore give us, like the story, a clear and delicate view into the harsh reality of an imprisoned child; from the beauty of small stones polished by a child鈥檚 hand, to the reality of her prison camp, to the sweeping glory of the Canadian landscape. I highly recommend this poignant, splendid telling, in both words and art, of Mira鈥檚 important story.鈥 鈥擬att Faulkner, author/illustrator of Gaijin: American Prisoner of War (recipient of the Asian/Pacific American Library Association Best Children鈥檚 Book Award) and My Nest of Silence
- Matt Faulkner, author/illustrator of Gaijin: American Prisoner of War (recipient of the Asian/Pacific American Library Association Best Children鈥檚 Book Award) and My Nest of Silence
鈥淎 melancholy yet hopeful picture book.鈥
- Booklist, 10/01/2023
鈥淭he somber reminder of a dark episode of history nevertheless ends in hope.鈥
- Foreword Reviews, 11/23
鈥淭he book鈥檚 minimal textual descriptions are one of its greatest strengths, allowing Michelle Theodore鈥檚 evocative images to render Mira鈥檚 adventures with Baku all the more affecting 鈥 an exemplary reading experience for children in K-7.鈥
- Miramichi Reader, 09/29/23
鈥淪ara Truuvert鈥檚 approach is sensitive and yet very complex, allowing Mira to be a child in a very grave situation and offer her hope through her imagination and memory.鈥
- CanLit for Little Canadians, 10/06/23