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Cargando... Tres amigos en busca de un muerto (1992)por Kazumi Yumoto
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. The Friends is a Japanese book that was translated into English. It is about 3 friends who are in "cram school" together. They go to this school in the summer so they pass the exam to get into a good junior high. They decide that they need to see a dead person and begin to spy on an old man thinking that he will drop dead at any second. The boys get to know the old man and he becomes a father figure to them all. This would be a good book to read before the elementary to middle school transition. It shows the universal elements for this age - bullies, fear of the unknown, sports -- as well as some things unique to the Japanese culture. For example, when one of the friends fails his exam, he goes to work for his parents fish shop instead of continuing with his education. Kiyama and his two best friends, Yamashita and Kawabe, are morbidly fascinated with death after Yamashita's grandmother dies. Learning that there is an old man who lives alone in a little dump of a house nearby, and is not expected to live much longer, they decide to spy on him regularly so that when he does die, they can see it. This morbid idea leads the three boys to learn a great many things. A little about death, but a lot about life. This is a Japanese novel translated into English. There are a few little shocks - just things that would feel out of place in a middle grade novel written in the West, including the very premise of the novel... three sixth grade boys spying on a lonely old man and waiting for him to die. But it is a sympathetic and very human tale in the end. Three twelve-year-old Japanese boys become curious about death and dead people after the death of one of their grandmothers. So they decide to spy on an old man who they believe is going to die soon. However, things don’t work out as the boys expected as they begin to make friends with the old man and they find themselves learning about life and friendship as well as death. This book treats the subject of death and children’s curiosity about it quite respectfully. The story also gives a glimpse into the life of a Japanese student, busy with the demands of school, cram school, sports, family life, and worry about the future. The characters are all subtly established and the boys grow up quite a bit throughout the book. This book, its themes, and the characters would probably resonate best with kids in fourth through seventh grade. This book is translated from the original Japanese and is the winner of the 1997 Mildred L. Batchelder Award for translated children’s books. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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Una novela sobre la muerte que defiende la alegría de vivir En clase, Yamashita es el gordinflón, Kiyama es tan larguirucho que le llaman «espárrago» y Kawabe, el raro que cada vez que habla de su padre se inventa una profesión distinta. Los tres tienen doce años y una vida normal... hasta que la abuela de Yamashita muere. Entonces experimentan una súbita curiosidad por la muerte: ¿qué pasará después?, ¿qué expresión se le quedará a uno al morir?, ¿existirán los espíritus? En busca de respuestas, deciden espiar a un anciano que vive cerca del colegio porque han oído comentar a un adulto que morirá pronto. Sólo es cuestión de organizarse para no perderle de vista. Y de que él no se dé cuenta, claro. Nada más publicarse en Japón, esta cálida y divertida novela se convirtió en un éxito fulminante: se tradujo a 14 idiomas, el director Shinji Somai la llevó al cine, obtuvo el premio JAWC al nuevo talento y en Estados Unidos ganó otros dos premios: el Boston Globe-Horn Book y el Mildred L. Batchelder. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)895.635Literature Literature of other languages Asian (east and south east) languages Japanese Japanese fiction 1945–2000Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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