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The Shaman's Apprentice: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest

AUTHOR: Lynne Cherry, Mark J. Plotkin
ISBN: 0152012818

SHORT DESCRIPTION: In a village deep in the heart of the Amazon rain forest, the shaman Nahtahlah has a place of honor in his tribe. But when the villagers fall sick with an illness that Nahtahlah cannot cure, many lose faith in the shaman's wisdom--until a foreign...

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         Editorial Review

The Shaman's Apprentice: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest
- Book Review,
by Lynne Cherry, Mark J. Plotkin


From School Library Journal
Grade 1-4AIn the Amazon rain forest, Kamanya describes how the shaman cures his fever with a mixture of leaves, roots, and bark. As he grows older, Kamanya follows Nahtahlah while he gathers plants for medicines. When the shaman's medicine cannot cure malaria and that of white missionaries can, the Tirio people turn away from traditional cures as well as from their familiar gods. The missionaries bring major changes to the lives of the Tirio, and extend a welcome to traders who carry away the forest's wildlife. Some years after the missionaries leave, an ethnobotanist arrives to learn about forest medicines from Nahtahlah. Her work, culminating in a book describing the plants and their uses, restores the people's respect for the wise man. Although some books about rain forests mention the current and potential importance of medicinal plants, this work enlivens and personalizes the topic. Based on a true story from Plotkin's Tales of a Shaman's Apprentice (Penguin, 1994), this picture book effectively introduces readers to another issue related to rain-forest loss. Cherry's watercolors are filled with flora and fauna and reveal her appreciation for this environment and its people.AKathy Piehl, Mankato State University, MNCopyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
Ages 5^-9. The author of The Great Kapok Tree (1990) takes us back to the Amazon rain forest, this time teaming up with ethnobotanist Plotkin. Together, they present a story in which a lesson about medicinal herbs is brought to life through young Kamanya, who dreams of becoming his tribe's next shaman. Kamanya spends his time following the current shaman into the forest and learning the secrets of the plants. But local plants can't cure the new diseases brought to the area by strangers, and the pills the strangers bring with them cause the indigenous people to lose faith in the ability of their shaman. Eventually a woman named Gabriella, who comes to study the properties of the rain forest plants, restores the tribe's faith. The lush illustrations make the story a visual pleasure. Even the endpapers are rich in detail, picturing some of the rain forest plants and noting their uses. Like other books Cherry has worked on, this one, which is based on a true story, is a unusual addition to rain forest literature. It will be useful not only for story hours but also as a springboard for classroom discussion for older children as well as younger ones. Helen Rosenberg


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         Book Review

The Shaman's Apprentice: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest
- Book Reviews,
by Lynne Cherry, Mark J. Plotkin

The Shaman's Apprentice: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest

ANNOTATION

Kamanya believes in the shaman's wisdom about the healing properties of plants found in the Amazon rain forest and hopes one day to be a healer for his people.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

For thousands of years, in the jungles of the Amazon, shamans have passed their wisdom of the medicinal values of rain forest plants from one generation to the next. The Shaman's Apprentice tells the story of a Tirio Indian boy who dreams of one day being the tribal shaman, and how he and his people learn the importance of their own knowledge about the healing properties of the rain forest.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Steve Lavis looks at animals foreign and domestic with two Peek-Through Board Books. On the Farm follows the wooly sheep as he searches out who has eaten its breakfast. As each page is turned, more animals become visible through the die-cut spaces. The culprits are found behind the tractor. In the Jungle follows the same format, only this time a crocodile is in hiding. "Here I am!" shouts the crocodile on the last spread. Then he asks, "Who wants to hide next?" ( Apr.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Children's Literature - Karen Porter

Kwamala, a native boy in the Amazon rain forest, is cured by the village shaman. Remembering the power of the shaman, Kwamala spends his childhood as the shaman's pupil. When missionaries introduce western diseases and western medicines, the villagers lose respect for the shaman. However, Gabriella, a Western scientist, seeks the shaman's help in researching the Amazon forests. She explains the value of native medicines to the villagers, and the shaman's place in their society is restored, and Kwamala grows up to be the next village shaman. While the story is told from Kwamala's perspective, it is clear that the book is more about western interactions with natives and their forests than about the life of the boy. It is the detailed and colorful illustrations more than the story itself that will draw the attention of children.

School Library Journal

Gr 1-4In the Amazon rain forest, Kamanya describes how the shaman cures his fever with a mixture of leaves, roots, and bark. As he grows older, Kamanya follows Nahtahlah while he gathers plants for medicines. When the shaman's medicine cannot cure malaria and that of white missionaries can, the Tirio people turn away from traditional cures as well as from their familiar gods. The missionaries bring major changes to the lives of the Tirio, and extend a welcome to traders who carry away the forest's wildlife. Some years after the missionaries leave, an ethnobotanist arrives to learn about forest medicines from Nahtahlah. Her work, culminating in a book describing the plants and their uses, restores the people's respect for the wise man. Although some books about rain forests mention the current and potential importance of medicinal plants, this work enlivens and personalizes the topic. Based on a true story from Plotkin's Tales of a Shaman's Apprentice (Penguin, 1994), this picture book effectively introduces readers to another issue related to rain-forest loss. Cherry's watercolors are filled with flora and fauna and reveal her appreciation for this environment and its people.Kathy Piehl, Mankato State University, MN

"The outstanding natural history and environmental title of the year." -- Smithsonian

S. A. Montgomery

"The best children's book on the rain forest ever published." -- Boston Globe


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