Tag Archives: Chris Soentpiet

America the Beautiful: Together We Stand by Katharine Lee Bates, illustrated by Bryan Collier, Raúl Colón, Diane Goode, Mary GrandPré, John Hendrix, Yuyi Morales, Jon J. Muth, LeUyen Pham, Sonia Lynn Sadler, and Chris Soentpiet

America the BeautifulReady to ring in the new year? Sing with me now – I’m pretty sure you know the words to this one: “O beautiful for spacious skies …” Yes, the patriotic classic gets a brand new kiddie book … with phenomenal illustrations created by a long list of award-winning artists who each command a line of the 1893 poem by pioneering poet/professor Katharine Lee Bates.

Every illustrated-stanza-double-paged-spread also includes a pithy presidential quote, from George Washington to Barack Obama. No worries – the choices are most definitely non-partisan: Jimmy Carter, Thomas Jefferson, Ronald Reagan, Abraham Lincoln, JFK, FDR and his (fifth) cousin Teddy Roosevelt, and George H.W. Bush, all get a say. And, just in case you’re feeling like you’re missing a favorite president, the whole book cover cleverly opens up on the other side to showcase all 44 POTUSes!

The awe-inspiring result might represent a rather different U.S. of A. than perhaps our forefathers envisioned centuries ago, but America the Beautiful is nothing less than stupendous. Take that cover, for instance: the always-delight-inducing LeUyen Pham‘s vision for ” … with brotherhood …” couldn’t be more inclusive, not to mention accurate for what 21st-century America looks like. And, call me crazy (many have), but I like to think that’s young Sasha Obama reaching for the stars! Go, girl, go!

To quote our favorite peanut farmer, Jimmy Carter: “We become not a melting pot but a beautiful mosaic. Different people, different beliefs, different yearnings, different hopes, different dreams.” The perfect words to start a thus-far perfect, brand new year. Here’s to a happy, merry, healthy 2013 to all indeed!

Tidbit: Can I just say that certain folks in the publishing world had major faith in Obama’s re-election??!! The book (which pubs today) arrived in my mailbox quite a bit before November 6, 2012. The bottom right picture on the POTUS  grid of the inside-side-of-the-cover – specifically the spot for the current president – just happens to be none other than Barack Obama … leaving no room whatsoever for anyone but. I’m just saying …

Readers: Children

Published: 2013

Leave a Comment

Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Nonfiction, .Poetry, Nonethnic-specific

Amazing Faces with poems selected by Lee Bennett Hopkins, illustrated by Chris Soentpiet

In a word – and to quote from the title – this book is amazing. Filled with poems chosen by award-winning poet Lee Bennett Hopkins that celebrate the wonders of our diversity, this gorgeous book is populated by the vibrant immediacy of Chris Soentpiet‘s stunning canvases that breathe life in the very amazing faces all around us.

The opening poem, “Amazing Face” by Rebecca Kai Dotlich, acknowledges Soentpiet’s own background as a Korean adoptee … the gurgling baby in motion, his arms flung wide, his one little foot up in the air, laughing in joy at his adoring mother holding him up for all the world to see as she tells him, “Amazing, your face. / Amazing.”  Clearly mother and child are not biologically related, but they have all the love to make them a forever-family. [Soentpiet groupies will also call to mind his illustrations for a previous book, Jin Woo by Eve Bunting, one of the most affecting picture books on transracial adoption, mostly because of Soentpiet's art.]

Soentpiet masterfully gathers a memorable crowd from all walks of life: from a young boy who has fallen asleep waiting for his mother to finish her long hours of sewing work in an excerpt from “My Chinatown” by Kam Mak, to a fabulous little girl with can-do attitude admiring her strong reflection in the bilingual “Me x 2″ by Jane Medina,  to the no-longer-lonely student whose teacher asks her to play in “Miss Stone” by Nikki Grimes, to the high-fisted young girl with flying ponytail and outstretched foot mid-kick in “Karate Kid” by Jane Yolen, to a young boy watching the nighttime shimmer in “High in the Sky” by Pat Mora … the list goes on and on …

Perhaps the most heartstring-pulling of all is “A Young Soldier” by Prince Redcloud, which captures the strong embrace of a father and his son who has just returned from military service, as the mother stands in the doorway in shocked relief, waiting her turn for a beloved hug from her young man who has seen too much: “… keeping / miles of memories / sealed within // one / heartbreaking / boyish / grin.”

As a grandmother and two grandchildren share memories in “Abuela” by J. Patrick Lewis, and a great crowd gathers for nighttime festivities in “My People” by Langston Hughes, gather your family, share Amazing Faces, and cherish the moments of wonder-filled togetherness.

Readers: All

Published: 2010

2 Comments

Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Poetry, African American, Korean American, Latino/a, Native American, Nonethnic-specific, Pan-Asian Pacific American

Brothers by Yin, illustrated by Chris Soentpiet

brothersyinThe follow-up to the writer-wife/illustrator-husband team’s award-winning Coolies resonates with deep hope. This Brothers for young readers tells the story of Chinese American Ming and his growing friendship with Irish American Patrick who lives just beyond the safety of San Francisco’s Chinatown.

Review: “TBR‘s Contributing Editors’ Favorite Reads of 2006: These Are a Few of My Favorite Things … in Print, That Is …,” The Bloomsbury Review, November/December 2006

TidbitChris Soentpiet was a delightful guest for the Smithsonian’s Korean American Centennial Commemoration‘s summer program, “Korean American Adoptees,” on July 24, 2003.

Readers: Children

Published: 2006

Leave a Comment

Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, Chinese American

Saturdays and Teacakes by Lester L. Laminack, illustrated by Chris Soentpiet

Saturdays and TeacakesEvery Saturday, a young boy pedals his bike to his grandmother’s house where she is waiting for him to share their weekly ritual which includes hot biscuits, the smell of cut grass, thick tomato sandwiches, and best of all, making then eating the sweet teacakes baked with such love. The stupendous paintings by Chris Soentpiet, a Korean adoptee (who is also my personal all-time favorite illustrator), bring the story to vivid life. Go ahead, reach out and touch.

Review: “New and Notable Books,” AsianWeek, March 25, 2004

TidbitChris Soentpiet was a delightful guest for the Smithsonian’s Korean American Centennial Commemoration‘s summer program, “Korean American Adoptees,” on July 24, 2003.

Readers: Children

Published: 2004

Leave a Comment

Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, Korean American, Nonethnic-specific

My Brother Martin: A Sister Remembers Growing Up with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. by Christine King Farris, illustrated by Chris Soentpiet

My Brother MartinThe legendary Martin Luther King, Jr. remembered as a young boy by his older sister, with images spectacularly captured by the award-winning Korean American illustrator Chris Soentpiet.

Review: “New and Notable Books,” AsianWeek, January 31, 2003

TidbitChris Soentpiet was a delightful guest for the Smithsonian’s Korean American Centennial Commemoration‘s summer program, “Korean American Adoptees,” on July 24, 2003.

Readers: Children

Published: 2003

Leave a Comment

Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Memoir, .Nonfiction, African American, Korean American

Dear Santa, Please Come to the 19th Floor by Yin, illustrated by Chris Soentpiet + Illustrator Profile

Dear SantaPicture the World: Children’s book illustrator Chris Soentpiet brings to life his diverse background

NEW YORK CITY — Even after being rejected by more than 10 publishers, Chris Soentpiet (pronounced SOON-peet) kept pounding the pavement. “I kept going because I wanted to eat. I needed a job,” he says. Today, Soentpiet is one of the most lauded children’s books illustrators. His remarkable titles include Peacebound Trains by Haemi Balgassi, So Far From the Sea and Jin Woo by Eve Bunting, and Molly Bannaky by Alice McGill.

Soentpiet’s 15th and latest title, Dear Santa, Please Come to the 19th Floor, is his second collaboration with his wife and business partner, whose pen name is Yin. The engaging book, about two young boys who live in a housing project and their memorable encounter with Santa, is based on Yin’s childhood growing up on the 19th floor of a New York City apartment.

The couple’s debut collaboration, Coolies, based on Yin’s Chinese American ancestors who helped build the transcontinental railroad, won the 2001 Parents’ Choice Foundation’s Gold Award for Best Picture Book and was named an American Library Association (ALA) Notable Book and an International Reading Association (IRA) Book Award winner in 2002.

Soentpiet first discovered his love of watercolors in a high school art class. So impressed was his art teacher that he secretly sent out Soentpiet’s work and helped him get a scholarship to the prestigious Pratt Institute in New York. Soentpiet thought he might be a commercial artist until he met illustrator Ted Lewin, who convinced him to illustrate children’s books.

“That was nearly 10 years ago,” says Lewin, “and his fire in the belly has not cooled. His work continues to amaze.”

Soentpiet now has a spacious home studio, his choice of projects and is able to take summers off. “But there was a time that I thought about quitting,” he confesses. “I really did live that life of a starving artist. Luckily I stuck with it; the bigger the risk, the bigger the reward.” … [click here for more]

Illustrator profile: “Picture the World: Children’s book illustrator Chris Soentpiet brings to life his diverse background,” KoreAm Journal, December 2002

TidbitChris Soentpiet was a delightful guest for the Smithsonian’s Korean American Centennial Commemoration‘s summer program, “Korean American Adoptees,” on July 24, 2003.

Readers: Children

Published: 2002

Leave a Comment

Filed under ...Author Interview/Profile, ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, Korean American

Dear Santa, Please Come to the 19th Floor by Yin, illustrated by Chris Soentpiet + Illustrator Interview

Dear SantaPicturing the Worlds of Chris Soentpiet

No number of rejections could dampen Chris Soentpiet’s determination to succeed and put his artwork forward. Even after being refused by more than 10 publishers as a fresh-faced college graduate, he continued pounding the pavement. “I kept going because I wanted to eat, I needed a job,” he says. Today, Soentpiet is one of the most lauded children’s book illustrators. His remarkable titles include Peacebound Trains by Haemi Balgassi, So Far From the Sea and Jin Woo by Eve Bunting, and Molly Bannaky by Alice McGill.

Just out, Dear Santa, Please Come to the 19th Floor is his 15th title, and his second collaboration with his wife and business partner, whose pen name is Yin. The delightful, engaging book about two young boys living in a housing project who have a memorable encounter with Santa, is based on Yin’s growing up on the 19th floor of a Lower Manhattan apartment.

The couple’s first collaboration, Coolies, based on Yin’s Chinese American ancestors who helped build the transcontinental railroad, won the Parents’ Choice Foundation’s Gold Award for Best Picture Book in 2001 and was named an ALA Notable Book and an IRA Children’s Book Award winner in 2002.

Soentpiet, who is a Korean-born adoptee, discovered watercolors in a high-school art class. His art teacher was so impressed that he secretly sent out Soentpiet’s work to art schools around the country and helped him get a scholarship to the prestigious Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. Soentpiet thought he might be a commercial artist until he met illustrator Ted Lewin, who encouraged him to illustrate children’s books and the rest, as they say, is history. “That was nearly 10 years ago,” says Lewin, “and his ‘fire in the belly’ has not cooled. His work continues to amaze.”

AsianWeek: How much of your Korean or your adoptive background gets played out in your books?
Chris Soentpiet: Being adopted has more of an impact on my illustrations than being Korean. I say that because being adopted gave me an opportunity to see the world. Before that, I only knew my childhood in Korea. When I came to America, it was a whole new experience, from Hawai‘i to Oregon to Alaska, then back to Oregon, and now here I am in New York. Traveling really broadened the way that I illustrate. I always wanted to expand. I didn’t want to be typecast, to be seen as only as an Asian person. Being adopted – my mother is Irish/German, my father is Dutch, and my baby brother is Hawaiian – our family feels like it’s the United Nations. So I never thought about just doing Korean books. I always wanted to draw all sorts of other people. … [click here for more]

Profile: “Picturing the Worlds of Chris Soentpiet,” AsianWeek, September 19, 2002

TidbitChris Soentpiet was a delightful guest for the Smithsonian’s Korean American Centennial Commemoration‘s summer program, “Korean American Adoptees,” on July 24, 2003.

Readers: Children

Published: 2002

Leave a Comment

Filed under ...Author Interview/Profile, ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, Korean American

Jin Woo by Eve Bunting, illustrated by Chris Soentpiet

Jin WooA sweet, loving story of a family awaiting the arrival of their second child, via airplane from Korea. Illustrated by the fabulously talented Chris Soentpiet, himself a Korean adoptee, Jin Woo is visually splendid. Soentpiet is an astonishing illustrator, creating pages that seem to pop alive before the eyes.

Review: “Young Reads,” aMagazine: Inside Asian America, August/September 2001

Readers: Children

Published: 2001

1 Comment

Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, Korean American

Coolies by Yin, illustrated by Chris Soentpiet

CooliesA memorable husband/wife collaboration rendered again with astonishing images by Chris Soentpiet, Coolies captures the story of two Chinese brothers who courageously, tenaciously help build the challenging, dangerous transcontinental railroad.

Review: “Young Reads,” aMagazine: Inside Asian America, August/September 2001

Readers: Children

Published: 2001

Leave a Comment

Filed under ..Children/Picture Books, .Fiction, Chinese American, Korean American