
Perfect
*Bank Street Best Book of the Year * Study of Multicultural Children's Literature Best Book of the Year * CCBC Choices Title * Oregon Spirit Book Award Honor
Author Waka T. Brown and artist Yuko Jones join forces for this picture book about a young girl who learns to appreciate lifeās imperfections when her grandmother teachers her about the Japanese art form kintsugi.
Miki Amelia Masuda liked everything in her life to be perfect. Her room was immaculately clean. She only ate round cookies, not the broken ones. And if a stuffed animal had a tear in it, she couldn't bear to look at it. So when she accidentally drops and breaks her favorite teacup, sheās devastated. How can a broken teacup ever be perfect again?
Days later, Miki's grandmother, Obaachan, presents Miki with the fixed teacup. But itās not perfect! Each crack is highlighted by a gold streak of paintāalmost as if to show off the imperfections!
What follows is one girlās journey to understanding that life isnāt always perfect. Through the art of kintsugi, Waka and Yuko show readersāand Mikiāthat rips, cracks, and tears have their own stories to tell, ones that are meaningful in their own way.Ā
*Bank Street Best Book of the Year * Study of Multicultural Children's Literature Best Book of the Year * CCBC Choices Title * Oregon Spirit Book Award Honor
Author Waka T. Brown and artist Yuko Jones join forces for this picture book about a young girl who learns to appreciate lifeās imperfections when her grandmother teachers her about the Japanese art form kintsugi.
Miki Amelia Masuda liked everything in her life to be perfect. Her room was immaculately clean. She only ate round cookies, not the broken ones. And if a stuffed animal had a tear in it, she couldn't bear to look at it. So when she accidentally drops and breaks her favorite teacup, sheās devastated. How can a broken teacup ever be perfect again?
Days later, Miki's grandmother, Obaachan, presents Miki with the fixed teacup. But itās not perfect! Each crack is highlighted by a gold streak of paintāalmost as if to show off the imperfections!
What follows is one girlās journey to understanding that life isnāt always perfect. Through the art of kintsugi, Waka and Yuko show readersāand Mikiāthat rips, cracks, and tears have their own stories to tell, ones that are meaningful in their own way.Ā
Original: $15.99
-70%$15.99
$4.80Description
*Bank Street Best Book of the Year * Study of Multicultural Children's Literature Best Book of the Year * CCBC Choices Title * Oregon Spirit Book Award Honor
Author Waka T. Brown and artist Yuko Jones join forces for this picture book about a young girl who learns to appreciate lifeās imperfections when her grandmother teachers her about the Japanese art form kintsugi.
Miki Amelia Masuda liked everything in her life to be perfect. Her room was immaculately clean. She only ate round cookies, not the broken ones. And if a stuffed animal had a tear in it, she couldn't bear to look at it. So when she accidentally drops and breaks her favorite teacup, sheās devastated. How can a broken teacup ever be perfect again?
Days later, Miki's grandmother, Obaachan, presents Miki with the fixed teacup. But itās not perfect! Each crack is highlighted by a gold streak of paintāalmost as if to show off the imperfections!
What follows is one girlās journey to understanding that life isnāt always perfect. Through the art of kintsugi, Waka and Yuko show readersāand Mikiāthat rips, cracks, and tears have their own stories to tell, ones that are meaningful in their own way.Ā























