A Single Shard
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Single Shard, A
This quiet but gently compelling story won the Newbery Medal, and it speaks well for the awarders that such an unsensational book could do so. It is set in 12th-century Korea, and its hero is a 12-year-old orphan called Tree-Ear. The boy has been raised by a disabled man whose nickname is Crane-man, to whom he was briefly entrusted as a toddler when fever prevented the local monks from giving him shelter, and from whom he then refused to be separated. They live a precarious, foraging existence from their ‘home’ under a bridge. Their village is a centre for the pottery industry, making the exquisite Koryo celadon now greatly valued in Asian museums. Tree-Ear determinedly gets himself an informal apprenticeship with the best of the village potters, the perfectionist and irascible Min, and Tree-Ear’s watchful learning of his craft takes up the first half of the book; the second is the story of his journey on Min’s behalf to the capital city, in search of a royal commission. There is only one truly ‘adventurous’ incident in the book. Otherwise it is all about people and values: about dedication to a craft, and artistic perfectionism; about friendship and loyalty; about everyday ethics; about standards of politeness and hospitality that shame the modern world; and about hard-won adoptive love. Vividly re-creating a lost society and the rules it lived by, this is a civilized and civilizing book.



