Moth and Wasp, Soil and Ocean: Remembering Chinese Scientist Pu Zhelong''s Work for Sustainable Farming
The narrator is a composite of people Pu Zhelong influenced in his work. With further context from Melanie Chans historically precise watercolors, this story will immerse young readers in Chinese culture, the natural history of insects, and the use of biological controls in farming. Backmatter provides context and background for this lovely, sophisticated picture book about nature, science, and Communist China.
The first time I saw a scientist in my village was also the first time I saw a wasp hatch out of a moths egg, writes the narrator of this picture book about Chinese scientist Pu Zhelong. In that moment I could not have said which was the more unexpectedor the more miraculous.
In the early 1960s, while Rachel Carson was writing and defending Silent Spring in the U.S., Pu Zhelong was teaching peasants in Mao Zedongs Communist China how to forgo pesticides and instead use parasitic wasps to control the moths that were decimating crops and contributing to Chinas widespread famine.
This story told through the memories of a farm boy (a composite of people inspired by Pu Zhelong) will immerse young readers in Chinese culture, the natural history of insects, and sustainable agriculture. Backmatter provides historical context for this lovely, sophisticated picture book.
The author, Sigrid Schmalzer, won the Joseph Levenson Post-1900 Book Prize for 2018 for her book Red Revolution, Green Revolution. This is the most prestigious prize for a book about Chinese history, and the book upon which Moth and Wasp, Soil and Ocean is based.
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