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Sunday, March 19, 2017

The Name Jar, by Yangsook Choi -- Day 59



On Unhei’s first day of school in America, kids on the bus tease her about her hard-to-pronounce Korean name. Arriving in her classroom, she doesn’t share her name, saying only that she plans to pick a new one. Her teacher and classmates respond with enthusiastic support, creating a name jar for all the suggestions they have. Unhei tries out each name, sometimes in front of her bathroom mirror, to see which one suits her: Daisy, Miranda, Laura…. Well, none of them seems right. Besides, Unhei reminds herself, her mother and grandmother chose her name carefully. “Unhei” means “grace,” and she treasures the wooden name stamp with the beautiful Korean character that her grandmother gave her. So, back at school she proudly introduces herself using her given name, and her classmates work hard to pronounce it correctly – “Yoon-hye.” Her new friend Joey even asks Mr. Kim at the Korean grocery to find a name stamp for him: “Chinku,” meaning “friend.”  Written and illustrated by Korean-born Yangsook Choi, The Name Jar is a warm-hearted, realistic story, a gift to all children and their adults. Ages 4-8.