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Tea With Milk (1999)

Tea with Milk (1999)

Book Info

Author
Rating
4.07 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0395904951 (ISBN13: 9780395904954)
Language
English
Publisher
hmh books for young readers

About book Tea With Milk (1999)

Tea With Milk took shape out of the real experiences and feelings from Say’s mother. When May’s parents decided to return to Japan, as an American daughter, “She did not want to leave the only home she had ever known. (p. 6)” “Once they arrived in Japan, she felt even worse. (p. 6)” Nothing seemed “right” for her. “No one called her May, and Masako sounded like someone else’s name. (p. 6)” She lost herself in this new country. “I’ll never get used to this place, she thought with a heavy heart. (p. 6)” People around “called her gaijin and laughed at her. Gaijin means ‘foreigner’. (p. 8)” “I’m a foreigner in my parents’ country, she thought. And they came back here because they didn’t want to be foreigners. (p. 14)” This was a true portrayal of May, and all the other American-born “foreigners,” especially Asian Americans, who were thought as foreigners in both America and their own country. May was tired of learning to be a proper Japanese lady and she was furious at her mother who hired a matchmaker to find a husband for her. Thus, as an American daughter, she left home and found a job as an elevator girl in another city. “It was shameful for ladies to work, (p. 20)” said her mother. May dreamed to go back to America, someday, “I wouldn’t have to be such a proper young lady there. I could get a job or drive a car and nobody would think anything of it. (p. 28)” When May met Joseph, who later became Say’s father, May felt happy for having someone who could speak English with. “This is the first real conversation I’ve had in a whole year. (p. 26)” Instead of their “loving story,” I was attracted by the visual angel of the following illustration in which they had tea in a café. The main focus of the picture was on a pair of young Japanese people, while May and Joseph was back in the corner. The young lady, wearing in kimono, smiling in a proper way—without showing her teeth to others—made a sharp contrast with May, who looked like gaijin in her own country. Like May’s “backdrop” role in this picture, she was neglected in real life, as gaijin in Japan and foreigner in America.

This book is my book for Asian/Pacific group. I really enjoyed reading this story. It is told from May's daughters point of view, but you do not find that out until the last page. May was born and raised in the United States. She was adopted but when her birth mother wants to move back to Japan, May feels like a foreigner, and others see her as that as well as they call her "Gaijin." She is different from the others in that country because she is used to the USA's way of life. She wants to work and drive, but for woman to do that in Japan is unseen. She doesn't like having to learn calligraphy and sit on the floor. Eventually, without the approval of her mother, she gets a job as an elevator attendant and eventually starts being a tour guide for guests that speak english. She eventually notices this boy who keeps coming to her tours and they start to talk. They become really close and move away to start a family.I really enjoyed reading about May and her story. It is interesting to see how someone reacts to moving to an unknown country and the changes that appear. Students may be able to relate to feeling out of place and this can give them hope. Just as May found her place, other students can also. The watercolor illustrations are also beautiful. There are not many bold colors, but that does not take away from this story. Bold colorful illustrations would not be helpful for this story. I would recommend this to 2nd to 5th grade students.

Do You like book Tea With Milk (1999)?

Tea With Milk is the story of Allan Say's parents who met in Japan after both had lived very different lives as children. May (Masako) grew up in San Francisco and was used to the American way before her parents decided to return to Japan. Joseph grew up with foster parents who spoke English in their home. Each a tiny bit rebellious, but they equally wanted a home to call their own, start a family, and be settled. Their story is lavishly embellished with watercolor illustrations that portray a struggle to meld two cultures into one as they search for a permanent place.
—Jackie

Tea with Milk tells the story of Masako (May), a Japanese American girl who moves from America to Japan just as she is about to finish high school in America. Her parents have decided that they are tired of feeling like foreigners in America and that the best thing for their family will be to return to Japan. Ironically, Masako does not like her new life in Japan as she is labeled a "gaijin" (foreigner) for not knowing how to speak Japanese. Masako's efforts to make her own way in Japan shape the story as it unfolds. This book is beautifully illustrated by the author, Allen Say, and the pictures contribute almost as much of the story-telling as the text itself. Many young people dealing with the intersection of their family's cultural and the traditional American way of life will relate to Masako's struggle to honor her parents while staying true to her own desires. Though the story is told from Masako's point of view, I wish Say had portrayed her parents and their desire to return to their homeland a bit more sympathetically. However, in sum, this is a great story of a modern girl's coming of age in her culturally mixed world.
—Rll52014_mollyharris

"Tea With Milk" is the story of a young Japanese American girl named May who grows up in America. She experiences both Japanese and American culture as she eats rice and drinks green tea for breakfast at home and eats pancakes and drinks tea with milk at her friends' houses. When now eighteen-year-old May's parents decide to return to Japan, May finds herself immersed in a totally new culture where she is made to wear an uncomfortable kimono, practice calligraphy, and settle for skipping college and instead getting married and having a family. The struggle between the two cultures May experiences is a very interesting perspective. I am used to reading stories about people who immigrate to the United States and have to experience American culture for the first time, not the other way around. What an interesting thing to move to a country where your parents were raised, your actual homeland, and not being able to fit in. Worst of all, May completely had to change the way she saw her life and all the goals she had for herself. Instead of being an independent, educated young woman, she was facing a life that was completely different and less rewarding.Luckily, May takes it upon herself to change her new life and moves to Osaka. There she finds a job, gets an apartment, and even meets someone she wants to spend the rest of her life with. The moral of the story is that your home isn't somewhere you live, it's wherever you want it to be and it's with whomever you choose. The illustrations in this book are a great representation of the characters' feelings. My favorite is on page 7, where May is wearing a kimono for the first time. Her slightly angled position and facial expression are perfect, displaying her unhappiness and how uncomfortable she is. Physically she may look the part, but it is still a new experience for her. Allen Say's book tells the actual story of his mother's experiences living in both the United States and Japan. It ties in nicely with his Caldecott Award-winning book, "Grandfather's Journey."
—Leane

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