It seems that I always get some of my best recommendations about "books too good to miss" from friends and colleagues. It was only fitting that my good friend and former colleague, Francine Johnston, would come to me at the North Carolina Reading Association Conference in March with a copy of Listen to the Wind in hand. It was Francine who originally recommended Three Cups of Tea...see previous posts. Does this woman know how to recommend wonderful books, or what? Of course, I had to have my own copy.
After perusing this marvelous picture book (you can peek at the book via the active link above via Amazon.com), it not only describes Dr. Greg Mortenson's valiant efforts to provide more than 50 schools for children in remote areas of Pakistan and Afghanistan, but does so within the beautifully rich context of fabric collage illustrations that will take your breath. The book details the process by which illustrator, Susan Roth, created the collages with cloth fragments, and actual artifacts from Baltistan and surrounding areas.
For those of you who have not read Three Cups of Tea, here is a bit of background information that also provides the basis for Listen to the Wind. In his quest to repay the people of Korphe who helped Mortenson when he lost his way while on an expedition to climb K2, he learned that what the people of this small village wanted more than anything else was a school. He kept his promise to build this first school and subsequently founded the Central Asia Institute and Pennies for Peace, whose mission is to build more and more schools in this remote area of the world. Mortenson contends that American efforts to fight Islamic extremism in these countries must focus on substantive efforts to address poverty by increasing access to education, primarily for girls. His story offers a message of hopefulness in terms of bridging world cultures, as well as looking beyond one's biases and perceptions, keeping promises, and helping others in need.
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