By Brandi-Ann Uyemura
Illustrated by Amy Matsushita-Beal
Hardcover, 32 pages.
This is a truly wonderful selection, blending a relatable story of overcoming initial failure with a meaningful exploration of ancestry and cultural heritage. The text provides valuable background on the Bon festival, its Buddhist origins, and its enduring tradition in Hawaii.This title is highly recommended for school libraries, offering rich opportunities for discussions on heritage, history, and community.
—School Library Journal
Description:
It’s a young Japanese-American girl’s first time at the “Festival of Souls,” one of the largest Buddhist festivals. It’s just like her grandfather described: the smell of corndogs, the glow of hanging paper lanterns, the beat of taiko drums. But Grandpa Jo didn’t tell her that everyone else already knew how to dance!
Suddenly, the lanterns feel like spotlights. She wish, wish, wishes she could dance, but she can’t bring herself to try… until Grandpa Jo encourages her to remember the meaning of the Obon Festival—celebrating our family members who have passed on—and to imagine her beloved Grandma Nat dancing along with her. Because she is there, and behind her are her parents, sugar-cane cutters, and behind them are their parents, who came to Hawai’I on ships from Japan…
My body moves to the rhythm of the music.
I am a bon dancer, one in a line of dancing ancestors.