No. of pages 40
Published: 2019
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This book has been graded for interest at 6-10 years.
There are 40 pages in this book. This book was published in 2019 by Penny Candy Books .
Meera Sriram grew up in India and moved to the U. S. at the turn of the millennium. An electrical engineer in her past life, she now enjoys writing for children and advocating early and multicultural literacy. Meera has co-authored several books published in India. She believes in the transformative power of stories and writes on cross-cultural experiences that often take her back to her roots. Meera loves yoga and chai, and lives with her husband and two children in Berkeley, California. Meera Sethi is a Canadian visual artist whose interdisciplinary practice encompasses a range of mediums to pose questions about the relationship between migration, diaspora, identity, and hybridity. Meera's work is in the permanent collection of the Royal Ontario Museum and the Wedge Collection and has been exhibited at the Art Gallery of Ontario, Art Gallery of Mississuaga, L'Oreal Melbourne Fashion Festival, among other national and international venues. She has been awarded multiple grants from the Toronto, Ontario, and Canada arts councils. Her work has been featured in NBC, NPR, The Toronto Star, The Globe and Mail, The Fader, Vice, VOGUE India, CNN, MTV and numerous other print and online publications. Meera lives and works in Toronto.
"In this beautifully bittersweet expression of love and loss, Asha mourns her grandma's death while learning to treasure her life and memory. With two long braids, bright blue glasses, a cheerful collection of knee-high socks, and a grieving heart, Asha travels from California to India to attend the funeral. The warmth of Indian culture is evident all around, from bold colors, patterns, and traditions to the patient understanding and support that the family shows each other as they heal together."-Foreword Reviews, starred review"This thoughtful picture book provides a rare and necessary perspective, free of tropes and cliches: that of the contemporary bicultural child whose heart is in two places, India and California. The focus on Asha's feelings gives this book powerful bibliotherapeutic value, and the ending brings a gentle and satisfying resolution."-Amina Chaudhri, Booklist