White Crane: Samurai Kids #1
by
Sandy Fussell & Rhian Nest James
Order:
USA
Can
Candlewick, 2010 (2010)
Hardcover
Reviewed by Hilary Williamson
W
hite Crane
, by Sandy Fussell and Rhian Nest James, is the first in a new
Samurai Kids
series that will appeal to middle schoolers, especially those who feel different from their peers. It's filled with adventure, humor, and snippets of Zen wisdom.
L
egendary Sensei Ki-Yaga, who was once a famed samurai warrior, hand picks students to train in his Cockroach Ryu. One-legged Niya Moto (whose spirit is the
White Crane
) has trained with Ki-Yaga for three years now. His fellow students are albino Kyoko (whose spirit is the
Snow Monkey
and who has extra fingers and toes); one-armed Mikko (whose spirit is the
Striped Gecko
); blind Taji (whose spirit is the
Golden Bat
); and huge, strong Yoshi, who doesn't want to fight but will not reveal why.
S
ensei, as ancient as the mountains ('
Most people think he died years ago
'), spends his time dozing in the sun, but still manages to see everything his
unwanted
students do. He tells them that '
Cockroaches are small, but they are very hard to kill.
' When Sensei sends Niya and Yoshi to the village for supplies, an earthquake sends Niya rolling down the mountain and Yoshi rescues him. He reveals his secret to his friend, and finds his spirit totem - the
Tiger
!
T
he students celebrate
Gembuku
(their coming of age) and prepare for the Samurai Training Games, which the arrogant Dragon Ryu is expected to win. En route, a new student (a Dragon reject) joins the close-knit Cockroach Ryu. At the games, teamwork and '
Chi, jin, yu
' ('
Wisdom, benevolence, and courage
') win the day.
White Crane
makes an excellent beginning to this new series,
Karate Kid
for middle schoolers.
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