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Caged

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A poignant picture book about a young Hmong girl born and raised in a refugee camp who imagines what lies beyond the bounds of its borders.
A young Hmong girl has never been outside the camp she lives in with her parents and thousands of other families. Most days, she spends her time playing with her cousins and pretending they can fly above the clouds and far away from here.
When her family’s papers are finally approved, she’s uncertain if she’s ready to leave everything—and everyone—she’s ever known behind. But on the day she leaves, her favorite aunt, Golden Flower, sees her off with the words, Your wings have arrived.
With poetic text by Kalia Kao Yang and stunning art by Khou Vue, Caged is about the power of imagination, resilience, and dreaming of freedom.
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    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2024
      A 6-year-old Hmong child grows up in a refugee camp, unaware of the outside world. "I live in a cage but I don't know it," states the unnamed protagonist, who was born here. The child's deftly paced narration describes surroundings--"bald hills and dry fields of flying dirt"--shared with "grandmothers with no teeth" and "mothers with babies on their backs." Armed guards patrol the area smoking cigarettes at night, "moving like fireflies around the edges of our world." Despite the bleak environment, children still use their imaginations to travel beyond their borders "to a place far from here!" These moments of joy break up harsh realities such as arduous living conditions and people fleeing war. Vue's simple cartoons are textured with splatters of colors and lines set against largely white backdrops; with honesty and sensitivity, the artwork portrays the protagonist's struggle to understand the concept of war while observing the pain endured by adults in the camp. Moments of lightness temper the heaviness, especially when an auntie insists that the young narrator isn't "a child of poverty, war or despair"; the child is "hope being born." When the family finally leaves the camp, the auntie whispers, "Your wings have arrived." In an author's note, Yang discusses how, after fleeing Laos, her own family lived in Thailand's Ban Vinai Refugee Camp, where she was born. Offers deep emotional insight into the refugee experience. (Picture book. 5-8)

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2024
      Grades K-3 In this moving picture book, Yang, inspired by her own memories, portrays life in a refugee camp through an unnamed protagonist. A six-year-old Hmong child born and raised in a refugee camp has no memories of the war and genocide her parents fled from. She also has no experience of life beyond the caged conditions of the camp with armed guards. She and her cousins imagine traveling far away from their dreary conditions of "bald hills and dry fields of flying dirt" where they have to eat "the same things over and over again." The young girl tries to imagine what war is like and is reminded by her aunt that she is not a child of war but is rather "hope being born." Simple-textured digital illustrations thoughtfully depict the children's bleak realities as well as their moments of joy and hope, capturing both their despair and resilience as they wait years for their "wings" to arrive to leave the camp. An insightful author's note reiterates the story's powerful and poignant themes on the refugee experience.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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