You may also like
A Visit To San Francisco's Chinatown
"San Francisco's Chinatown" (revised ed. 2016) offers in a short pictorial history the opportunity to get to know a storied community from its beginnings in the mid-nineteenth century to the present. Judy Yung, professor emerita of American Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz, a Chinatown native, and the author of several books on Chinese Americans wrote this book for the Images of America series of local American histories with the support of the Chinese Historical Society of America.
San Francisco's Chinatown is usually considered the largest and most famous Chinese community outside of Asia. With her textual discussion and her well-chosen and well-reproduced images, Yung succeeds in giving an inside portrait of the community throughout the extensive changes it has undergone in time. The book shows the residents of Chinatown in their relationships to one another, to the city of San Francisco, to the United States and to the world. It offers understanding and insight in a short pictorial account.
The book follows the changes in Chinatown's fortunes over the years and the making of a cohesive community that for many years was rejected before ultimately becoming a treasured part of the United States. Yung's book shows the first Chinatown community called Tong Yun Fow which lasted in San Francisco on the same site as the current community from 1848 until it was destroyed by the great earthquake of 1906. The book offers many rare photographs of this old community and of old San Francisco, with cluttered overcrowded streets, Chinese pushcart peddlers and fishermen, the beginnings of community organizations, and images of opium dens,prostitution, gambling, and gangs. It is a revealing portrait of an early community enhanced by Yung's commentary.
After the earthquake, Chinatown rebuilt and reinvented itself. Yung shows the effort required to rebuild Chinatown with an eye towards tourism, even at that early time. The book guides the reader through the narrow, crowded Chinatown streets to show the enterprise of the community's people, their businesses, public lives and celebrations, and community organizations at a time when the Chinese still faced extensive discrimination. While focusing on events within the community, Yung describes as well the relationship of the community with China and with the changes in the Chinese government. The book discusses the WW II years, the patriotism of the Chinese community, and the lifting of many discriminatory barriers as a result of America's alliance with China in the war.
In a chapter titled "Guilded Ghettos", Yung describes how the community was threatened after the war when many of its more prosperous residents were able to move elsewhere. The community was able to hold on through difficult times and expanded with the influx of immigration following the 1965 revision of the immigration laws. The community managed to retain its own character while responding to the turbulent events in the United States of the 1960s.
The final chapter of the book shows contemporary Chinatown, which has been described as one of the Top Ten Great Neighborhoods in the America for its exceptional character, quality, and lasting value. The photos show the continuity of Chinatown with its earliest days through public events such as parades and through community cohesiveness as Chinatown has made a home for itself in the 21st Century.
The book concludes with a street map of Chinatown which allows the reader to put in context the many landmarks and sites discussed in the text. It also includes a bibliography for readers wishing to learn more.
Interested readers with no ties to Chinatown will be moved, as I was, by getting to know the community and its people through this history. Readers familiar with Chinatown will learn more about their community and gain a valuable sense of it through time. The book gave me an appreciation of Chinatown and its role in our diverse and beloved country.
You may also like
Constitution of the United States (America 250 Edition)
9781467180047
Regular price $0.00 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in 'NaN' (Not a Number)%
The Majesty of the French Quarter
9781565544147
Regular price $39.95 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%"�highly recommended for architecture, photography, and history collections everywhere." --Library Journal
"McCaffety knows how to capture the fleeting beauty of a moment." --Times Picayune
For many, the French Quarter is New Orleans, yet how much do they really know about the Vieux Carr�? Truman Capote wrote, "Of all secret cities, New Orleans . . . is the most secretive. . . . [Its] architecture deliberately concocted to camouflage, to mask, as at a Mardi Gras Ball, the lives of those born to live among these protective edifices."
Through striking photographs and polished prose, The Majesty of the French Quarter opens the locked door and invites readers to discover a multitude of hidden marvels. Among the discovered gems is the 1828 Bourbon Street mansion of Lindy Boggs, U. S. ambassador to the Vatican and former congresswoman. Pictured are many such homes' secret, overgrown gardens where, noted Capote, "mimosa and camellias contrast color, and lazing lizards, flicking their forked tongues, race along palm fronds." Also featured are rare glimpses of the antique-filled and artfully decorated interiors of some of the Quarter's most majestic homes, including that of New Orleans novelist Julie Smith.
While this series has examined New Orleans as a whole and the city's Garden District in particular, the French Quarter has quietly kept her secrets to herself-until now.
Mary Cassatt
9781589804524
Regular price $16.99 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%“With large, crisply reproduced, color artwork on nearly every page, this picture-book biography . . . will appeal to a broad age-range.” —Booklist
Mary Cassatt knew from a young age that she wanted to make her living as an artist. She persuaded her parents to send her to the prestigious Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts at age fifteen, and by age twenty, she had moved abroad to begin her painting career. After several years of study and success, she found her rightful place among the Impressionists, becoming their first and only female American member.
Illustrated with Cassatt’s own work and that of other influential Impressionists, as well as photographs of the artist, this book offers children a glimpse at life during the late 1800s and showcases the colorful vivaciousness of Cassatt's work. Her beloved portraits of mothers and children are highlighted here, but the book also includes lesser-known work that shows Cassatt’s range of talent. Children will enjoy seeing the warm and loving images of others their age relaxing with pets, enjoying the outdoors, and being held by caring adults.
Inspiring for all children, but especially appropriate for those with artistic interests, this book shows how one girl's lifelong dream to become an artist came true due to an independent spirit, determination, and commitment to her craft.
“Attractive, clear, and useful to young students.” —Library Media Connection
“Through both words and art, this biography beautifully pictures the life of a talented and courageous woman.” —www.childrenslit.com
“Explores history and social context in an engaging manner that will connect readers—and their parents—to earlier times.” —The Bloomsbury Review
The Story Behind the Stone
9781455615193
Regular price $19.95 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%This pictorial guide covers more than forty New Orleans monuments. From the statue of Joan of Arc that stands in the French Quarter to the bronze bust of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the corner of Claiborne Avenue and Felicity Street, entries flow in chronological order, based on each figure's birthday.
The overviews include a biographical sketch of the historical figure, a description of the monument, and a reminder of its significance. The book includes such well known dignitaries as Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville and John James Audubon, along with more obscure individuals like Albert Weiblen, the German sculptor whose granite and marble company provided materials for many statues in the city.
Though a few of the monuments exist in the private collections of museums, others can be found by simply taking a leisurely stroll through the French Quarter. Each work of art underscores New Orleans's rich heritage and serves as a reminder that its citizens can transcend any challenge.
Solomon Northup's Twelve Years a Slave
9781565543447
Regular price $15.95 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%"The retelling of Solomon Northup's true story is a valuable contribution to black history. Readers of all ages will enjoy . . . this important account." -Charles A. Hicks, former Arkansas state supervisor of education
"Solomon Northup's trials and tribulations are retold in such a way that young-adult readers will be totally captivated by his story." -Children's Literature
Solomon Northup, a family man and hack driver in upstate New York, was kidnapped, whisked away from his home, and sold into slavery. His remarkable account of the epic journey from free man of color to slave to free man again is even more astonishing because it was written entirely from memory. As a slave, Northup was permitted neither pen nor paper, yet he was able to recall his ordeal in exacting detail.
Considered one of the best firsthand accounts of the slavery experience, this autobiographical story, originally published in 1853, has been painstakingly rewritten for children aged eight through twelve. This story of perseverance presents to children a personal side of the often-detached history of slavery.
Sue Eakin, who interpreted the story for a younger audience, saw her first copy of Solomon Northup's Twelve Years a Slave: 1841-1853 when she was just twelve years old. Years later, as a graduate student at Louisiana State University, she chose the book as the topic for her thesis.
Cruising Guide from Lake Michigan to Kentucky Lake
9781565549951
Regular price $32.95 Save Liquid error (snippets/product-template line 248): Computation results in '-Infinity'%A guide to cruising rivers along the Great Loop in the United States, from Lake Michigan to Kentucky Lake.
Covering over 800 miles of navigable inland rivers from Lake Michigan to Kentucky Lake, this book guides cruisers through America’s heartland. In eleven regional chapters, Capt. Rick Rhodes explores the entire navigable sections of the Chicago, Calumet, Des Plaines, and Illinois rivers, as well as parts of the Mississippi, Ohio, Cumberland, and Tennessee. Topics specific to inland cruising, such as negotiating floods safely and sharing rivers with commercial traffic, are addressed here. Also, by featuring numerous historical anecdotes and other river lore, Cruising Guide from Lake Michigan to Kentucky Lake gives insight into the region's past along with current restaurant and entertainment options.
Like all of Pelican’s cruising guide series, this book contains up-to-date and thoroughly researched information about the area, including:
- Five NOAA chart excerpts
- Twenty-one sketch charts
- Ninety-one marinas
- Fifty-three fuel locations
- More than thirty cities & towns
- Thirty-three GPS way points
- Fifteen locks
- Over 170 bridges
- 140 launches and ramps
- Hundreds of phone numbers