Picture of author.

Rafe Martin

Autor(a) de The Rough-Face Girl

28+ Works 4,639 Membros 186 Críticas

About the Author

Rafe Martin is a lay teacher in the Harada-Yasutani koan line. He is founding teacher of Endless Path Zendo, Rochester, New York, and is also an award-winning author and storyteller whose work has been cited in Time, Newsweek, the New York Times and USA Today.

Obras por Rafe Martin

The Rough-Face Girl (1992) 2,407 exemplares
Birdwing (2005) 620 exemplares
Foolish Rabbit’s Big Mistake (1985) 312 exemplares
Will’s Mammoth (1989) 241 exemplares
Awakening to Zen: The Teachings of Roshi Philip Kapleau (1997) — Editor — 138 exemplares
The World Before This One (2002) 113 exemplares
The Shark God (2001) 104 exemplares
The Boy Who Lived with the Seals (1993) 95 exemplares
The Brave Little Parrot (1998) 93 exemplares
The Storytelling Princess (2001) 70 exemplares
Mysterious Tales of Japan (1600) 66 exemplares
The Language of Birds (2000) 54 exemplares

Associated Works

Best Shorts: Favorite Stories for Sharing (2006) — Contribuidor — 90 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Críticas

I was prepared to dislike this but I liked it very much. The illustrations are incredible, I cannot believe this is the same illness strator as the No, David books.

Content Concern- if you prefer to search out voices that are Native American for these folktales- this is not that. But it is beautiful.
 
Assinalado
FamiliesUnitedLL | 122 outras críticas | Feb 20, 2024 |
Independent Reading Level: Grades 3-4
Honors/Awards: Georgia Children's Book Award (Winner – Picturebook – 1994)
Nebraska Golden Sower Award (Winner – Little Bluestem (Picture Book) – 1994)
Patricia Gallagher Children's Choice Picture Book Award (Winner – 1999)
Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award (Nominee – Grades K-3 – 1995)
 
Assinalado
mkoch22103 | 122 outras críticas | Nov 22, 2023 |
I absolutely love that this book is a Native American version of Cinderella. It utilizes pictures that would build one's imagination vividly of Indigenous people and their traditions realistically. It is mystical and timeless!

I also love that the author uses the character traits of the Rough-Face Girl to depict lessons of morality. The first one teaches the moral of being beautiful on the inside regardless of one's appearance on the outside. The second take away lesson of the story is that people who are cruel and inconsiderate to others receive their just reward as do those who are kind and humane to others.

It"s a fairy tale about an Algonquin girl (youngest of three girls) who was disfigured by the sparks of fire that she is expected to attend too. She lives with her father and two mean sisters. The sisters are spoiled and beautiful. Even though their father is poor, he still gives them what they want while the youngest, Rough-Face, receives broken worn out leftovers.

There is a mysterious Invisible Being, who is handsome, lives by a lake near her village. He is looking for a wife with the help of his sister. Every girl in the village wants to marry the Invisible Being, but before they can, they have to answer his sister's questions about him. Of course, the girls who are ugly at heart lie when answering questions, so they are sent back shamed.

Rough-Face girl wants to marry the Invisible Being too. She sadly has to make do with whatever leftovers she is given by her father for her dress, jewels, and moccasins. People in the village make fun of her as she was through the village towards the lake where the Invisible Being's wigwam is. But when the Invisible Being and his sister finally meet the Rough-Face Girl, they see at once that she is a beautiful, humble person on the inside, her heart. They are impressed with her resilience, humbleness, and honesty. The Invisible Being turns her into her original beautiful self with no scars, Shiny black hair, beautiful skin. They live happily ever after married.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
McheleD1 | 122 outras críticas | Feb 24, 2023 |
Review From Gooreads":

What a breath of fresh air. This book cuts right through our tendencies towards "spiritual materialism" and simply acting the part, and shows - through tales of the Buddha's lifetimes - that doing the actual work of the path towards enlightenment is messy and hard, but also beautiful and freeing and the only real way to get there. It's not about "pretending to be the Buddha," as Martin says, by walking around looking serene, smiling beatifically, spouting platitudes and always being calm. It's about showing up in every. single. moment. Here, NOW.

"It's not enough to sit and meditate and experience calm, silence, and peace - as good as those things are...But we must stand up, walk out of the zendo, and actualize the Way in our life, not just talk about it, not just make the meditation hall into a place to hide out from a crazed and crazy world. We are the way."

And the jataka tales of the thousands of lives of "the Buddha-before-he-was-the-Buddha," a few of which are given in this book and accompanied by insightful, straightforward commentary from Martin, are the map. The Buddha wasn't always perfect, wasn't always enlightened, was once (or a lot of times) just like us. But he seized opportunity after opportunity to learn, try, fail, try again, fail again, on and on until one day he sat under that bodhi tree and all that work paid off. And then he got up again, and got back to work.

"For one on the bodhisattva path, daily life is the context...Daily life and its responsibilities make the Way possible. Its challenges are the Way. They're not obstacles to the Way, nor are they in the way...It's about actualizing practice in the midst of the 'ten thousand things.'"

LOCATION: Scripture /Sutra
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
TallyChan5 | Dec 14, 2022 |

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Associated Authors

Tatsuro Kiuchi Illustrator
Junko Morimoto Illustrator
Susan Gaber Illustrator
David Shannon Illustrator
Calvin Nicholls Illustrator
Barry Moser Illustrator

Estatísticas

Obras
28
Also by
1
Membros
4,639
Popularidade
#5,437
Avaliação
4.1
Críticas
186
ISBN
85
Línguas
2

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