Book Description
for My Indigo World by Rosa Chang
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Indigo is celebrated as a color, a plant, and an art form in a multifaceted volume that begins with the author’s childhood recollections of the color blue. Growing up in Korea, she admired blue in its many forms: the fluctuating blue of the sky, the stripes on the sleeves of her hanbok, the sea. Now an adult living in the United States, she grows indigo on a small cooperative farm. Each summer she and her friends cultivate the plants from seeds, harvest the leaves, and make their own indigo dye—“the bluest blue of all”—which they use to color a variety of garments and other fabrics. Indigo is more than just a color; for her and her friends, it represents connection, cultural heritage, and healing. (Korea has a long cultural history of jjok, or indigo, dyeing.) The narrative touches on the uses of indigo around the world and its history in the United States while remaining grounded in the author’s personal experience. Illustrations made using watercolors and hand-dyed indigo fabrics include clear, labeled images showing the steps of the indigo-making process. Extensive end matter includes information about indigo species and Korean jjok dyeing, a map showing the variance in indigo shades around the world, and instructions for making indigo dye using two traditional East Asian methods. (Ages 5-9)
CCBC Choices 2024. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2024. Used with permission.