Sivu's Six Wishes
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More About This Title Sivu's Six Wishes

English

The stonemason Sivu can create extraordinary things out of rock. But he is poor, and as time goes by he becomes bitter and envious. If only he could be rich and powerful — surely then he would be happy?

When Sivu’s wish is mysteriously granted six times, however, transforming him by turn into a rich businessman, the mayor, the sun, a rain cloud, and a great rock, he learns that sometimes people have the most power just by being themselves. Using clear, elegant storytelling and exquisite illustrations, Jude Daly translates the timeless Taoist story of The Stonecutter to a modern-day African setting, conveying a timeless message for our own age.

English

Jude Daly lives in Cape Town, South Africa, with herhusband, writer and illustrator Niki Daly, and their sonsJoe and Leo. Her previous titles include The Tale ofParadise Lost: Based on the Poem by John Milton byNancy Willard (Atheneum), The Elephant's Pillow byDiana Reynolds Roome (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), which wasawarded a Parents' Choice Silver Honor, and The Stone: APersian Legend of the Magi by Dianne Hofmeyr (Farrar,Straus & Giroux).

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AWARDS and RECOGNITIONS
 Westchester County Library SystemAnne Izard Storytellers' Choice Award List (2009-2010)


Kirkus Reviews"Daly gives her version of the oft-retold 'Stonecutter' a contemporary setting — dressing small figures in modern clothes and placing them as often as not against urban backdrops. Discontented with the small income he earns from carving huge and widely admired lions and other animals, Sivu wishes to be a rich merchant. Suddenly, he is just that . . . but his discontent only grows, and with successive wishes he becomes the Mayor, the Sun (looming with a smirk over a land that quickly becomes drought stricken), a rain cloud, the wind and finally a mass of stone. Being unrestrained and insensitive in all guises, though, he ends up being more hated than respected. Unlike Gerald McDermott (1975), Demi (1995), Jon J. Muth (2009) and other retellers, the author lets readers draw their own conclusions by electing to end with Sivu feeling his rocky self being cut by another carver but not yet figuring out the implicit lesson. His lack of self-understanding adds another thought-provoking element to a tale identified as Taoist." Booklist
"With a contemporary setting and a multiracial cast typical of Daly's native Cape Town, the author and illustrator retells a beautiful ancient Taoist tale of a man who envies those with power until he discovers the true power he finds in making art. Sivu is a stonecutter who can coax a vibrant animal or person out of lifeless rock, but he is bitter and disappointed that he makes so little money. Magically, his wishes to be wealthy and important are granted, but when he becomes both a businessman and a mayor, he turns ugly and mean, and everyone hates him. Then he gets his wishes to be the sun, the rain, and the wind, and he can move everything, except a huge rock, bigger and more powerful than anything else on earth; only a stonemason can bring the rock to life, and Sivu does. The bright, unframed, folk-art-style acrylic paintings contrast Sivu as a powermonger with the forces of the universe. Young people will enjoy the drama caused by sivu's jealousy as well as the surprising end and its celebration of art." Publishers Weekly
"Daly retells the Taoist tale of Sivu, a stonecutter whose wishes to become increasingly powerful are swiftly granted. Watching jealously, the fickle Sivu wishes to become a businessman, the mayor, the sun, the rain (which blocks the sun), the wind (which blows away the rain clouds), and finally a piece of stone — whereupon he finds himself being hammered on by a stonecutter. Though the story is from ancient China, Daly (To Everything There Is a Season) sets it in modern Africa. Sivu and the people who surround him have an assortment of white and brown faces, cars speed along the highway, and the mayor rides in a white limousine. Spare acrylics are warmed by African oranges, blues, and earth tones. Lighthearted at the start ('What a life!' Daly describes Sivu's career in business. 'With the snap of his fingers . . . he would declare that a shipment of wool was too woolly'), the storytelling darkens progressively ('Soon the country was gripped by drought,' says Daly, after Sivu becomes the sun, 'and everybody cursed him'). A stark portrait of the futility of envy."
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