


Happily, nothing about that discussion should be a hardship, as Muth's book has something to offer readers of all ages.Stillwater - the wise and gentle Panda whose zen teachings were first to be seen in Zen Shorts and Zen Ties - returns in this third picture-book adventure, inviting Addy, Michael and Karl to a storytelling session at his house, after they finish their Halloween trick-or-treating. Muth provides a helpful author's note at the end of book about Zen Buddhism, koans in general, and the history of the Senjo story in particular, but this is still the kind of story that parents should discuss with their children. I was interested to note that while the kids seemed to love the book (and no one had any problem accepting a story that involved a giant talking panda!), quite a few of them were upset by the idea of the koan-a question designed to have no concrete answer. I always try to run the children's titles we review past age-appropriate readers, so I read Zen Ghosts to a group of first graders. In Zen Ghosts, Stillwater rounds out an evening of Halloween trick-or-treating by telling the children a ghost story based on a Zen koan (one of the questions Zen practitioners contemplate in their search for enlightenment) called Senjo and Her Soul are Separated. All three books feature a Zen Buddhist panda named Stillwater and his trio of young human friends: siblings Karl, Michael, and Addy. Zen Ghosts follows 2005's Caldecott Honor Book Zen Shorts and 2007's Zen Ties. It's short on words, but overflows with thought-provoking storytelling and gorgeous, glowing art. Muth's Zen Ghosts is an example of kid-friendly surrealism done absolutely right. Unlike the book we featured yesterday, Jon J.
