Baba's Peach Tree

Baba's Peach Tree
Author(s)
Co-Authors / Illustrators
Age Range
4+
Release Date
May 14, 2024
ISBN
978-0593565070
Buy This Book
      
In this moving picture book, a migrant worker and his daughter, find good fortune in the form of a peach tree growing behind their house in rural China. Filled with stunning illustrations, this is a unique and poignant story about love, perseverance, and family.

Behind their old stone house, Tao Hua and her father, Baba, discover good fortune: a peach tree. Baba prunes and tends to the tree. He calls it a blessing, like good shoes, hot rice, and books. And for a long time, the peach tree offers them fruit and hope for a better life. But time passes, and so do the seasons, and, one day, the tree does not blossom.

But life blossoms in a different way when Baba comes home and announces that he got a job in the Big City, where there are good schools and opportunities. And so the seasons pass, and, one day, when Baba is very old, he and his daughter return to their old home and to new peach trees--to old memories and new beginnings.

Baba’s Peach Tree is a story of the dreams we dream and the sacrifices we make as seen through the lens of a migrant family.

Editor review

1 review
Sweet illustrations paired with a moving story
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
5.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
5.0
Baba's Peach Tree is a gently told story about a father and his daughter, with a central theme of "The things we nourish always flourish," my favorite line in this book.

Featuring stunning color-saturated digital illustrations in muted hues, you can't help be moved by Tao Hua, her father, and the peach tree he cares for. Seo Kim has done a fabulous job using a color pallet that evokes a range of emotions.

The story revolves around the planting of a peach tree that grows to produce a crop that can be sold.
My child loved that Tao Hua's father saved the very best peaches for her, and that she buried, or planted, the peach pits with wishes.
However, like most things in life, the peach tree eventually has no more fruit to give, and the family looks for other ways to make an income. It means moving to an apartment in the city, where we see the young Tao Hua blossom into adulthood and her father grow old.
We come full circle, back to the stone house where Baba's peach tree once stood, and are moved by the orchard that has sprung up.

It's a moving story about a fathers love and the wishes of a young girl. A spectacular read for anyone.
Report this review Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0

User reviews

There are no user reviews for this listing.
Already have an account? or Create an account