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Children's Fiction Middle East

The Camel in the Sun

by (author) Griffin Ondaatje

illustrated by Linda Wolfsgruber

Publisher
Groundwood Books Ltd
Initial publish date
Sep 2013
Category
Middle East, General, Values & Virtues
Recommended Age
0
Recommended Grade
p to 12
Recommended Reading age
0
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781554983810
    Publish Date
    Sep 2013
    List Price
    $17.95

Classroom Resources

Download Teacher’s Guide

Download Teacher’s Guide

Where to buy it

Out of print

This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.

Description

Inspired by a retelling of a traditional Muslim hadith, or account of the words or actions of the Prophet, which the author first heard in Sri Lanka, this is the story of a camel whose cruel owner only realizes what suffering he has caused when the Prophet appears and shows love to the animal.

The camel has worked its entire life for a man called Halim, carrying bundles of spices, dates, incense, silver and wool on long journeys across the desert, east of the Red Sea. It often has to climb steep dunes, run when it is exhausted, and wait in the hot sun while Halim sits in the shade talking to the other merchants. One day the camel is overwhelmed by sadness and finds itself in tears. But still Halim shows no sympathy.

When they arrive in the beautiful garden-filled city of Medina where the Prophet lives, the merchant refreshes himself with food and drink and then naps on a pillow of sand, once again leaving the tired camel to stand alone in the burning sun. But when the Prophet sees the camel's plight, everything changes. Halim finally empathizes with the camel's pain and suffering.

The Camel in the Sun was inspired by a Muslim story told to the author when he was in Sri Lanka. That story was a retelling of a hadith, and this book was respectfully inspired by both the retelling and a translation of the hadith itself. It is an unforgettable story about empathy. It is beautifully, respectfully and sensitively illustrated by Linda Wolfsgruber, whose images and earthy palette reflect her time spent in the Middle East.

About the authors

Griffin Ondaatje is the author of The Camel in the Sun, illustrated by Linda Wolfsgruber, which was selected for the Austria Children’s Book Prize, shortlisted for the Middle East Book Award, and has been translated into German and Korean. He is also the editor of The Monkey King and Other Stories, a collection of South Asian stories, folktales and legends, and the director of Complete Unknown, a documentary film about Bob Dylan. He has three children and lives with his family in Toronto.

Griffin Ondaatje's profile page

Linda Wolfsgruber is a highly acclaimed artist in Austria and around the world. She has exhibited her work throughout Europe as well as in the United States and Japan and has won many awards, including the Austrian Children's and Juvenile Book Award for Illustration (four times) and the Golden Apple of the Biennial of Illustration Bratislava. She has been nominated for the prestigious Hans Christian Andersen Award. Her very original illustrations appear in Inanna: From the Myths of Ancient Sumer, Stories from the Life of Jesus and Brunhilda and the Ring.

Linda Wolfsgruber's profile page

Awards

  • Commended, Leserstimmen Prize
  • Commended, Austria Children's Book Prize
  • Commended, Middle East Book Award

Editorial Reviews

A lesson in empathy—for animals but also in general—delivered at a pace as stately as a camel’s.

Kirkus Reviews

Ondaatje’s style is deliberate and solid, creating a reverent feel that will resonate even with kindergarteners. . . . [Wolfsgruber's] sandy, sunburned colour palette and use of monoprints captures a feeling of timelessness.

Quill & Quire

In stark descriptive language, Ondaatje eloquently retells a traditional Muslim hadith . . . Wolfsgruber’s atmospheric monoprint illustrations deftly evoke the ancient desert society.

School Library Journal

[R]esonates with universal meaning . . . A lovely, deeply moving explication of an essential truth.

Horn Book

The reader will feel the camel’s thirst and exhaustion and will gain a new empathy for animals after reading this amazing story.

Library Media Connections

Ondaatje narrates with graceful lyricism...A tender story, eloquently rendered.

Publishers Weekly, STARRED REVIEW

This will appeal to many ages, both as a peek into another culture and as an engaging story about a creature that finally gets the empathy it deserves.

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