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Cargando... The Day Sun was Stolenpor Jamie Oliviero
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One day Bear reaches up into the sky, steals Sun, and buries him in a cave. It is up to brave Ts'ina dabju to rescue Sun and save the world from the dark and cold. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)398.22Social sciences Customs, Etiquette, Folklore Folklore Folk literature Legendary or mythological personsClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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This is a retelling of a legend of the Haida oral tradition. It takes place at the beginning of time when Raven creates all the animals. Bear ends up with a coat of hair twice as thick as any of the other animals. This makes him very how and uncomfortable when the Shun shines. He captures the Sun and pits it in a cave. The world becomes cold and dark and the other animals suffer. A young boy, Ts’ina dabiu, tricks Bear and shaves half his hair off. Bear gets cold and takes the Sun out and tosses it into the sky. He’s not too warm in summer but since he gets cold in winter now, he goes into his cave and sleeps all winter. The other animals collect his shaved hair and add it to their own coats. This is how it came to be that bears sleep and some animals grow thicker hair in winter.
Young elementary students will like this book. The story is very simple and easy to understand. The illustrations are also simple, with some detail but not a great deal. Only 3 or 4 colors are used on one illustration. What makes this book unique is that a Haida artist, Sharon Hitchcock, illustrated it. She used the same artistic traditions Haida people use in creating totem poles. The endsheets of the book have drawings of totem poles depicting Raven and Bear, there is a note explaining the symbolism of the totems. ( )