Children's library
A curated list of children's books on Eastern themes. Every entry is read and reviewed by hand, with honest age guidance and content notes for parents, teachers, and gift-givers.
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Hindu
Stories from the Mahābhārata, Rāmāyaṇa, Krishna, the gods, and the Gita.
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The Gita for Children
An audacious, warm, conversational retelling of the entire Bhagavad Gita for middle-grade readers — and secretly for anyone who has ever found the Gita intimidating. Pai walks the reader through all 18 chapters in plain English, with asides, footnotes, and jokes, and refuses to dumb it down. A bestseller in India and a quiet revolution in religious-text education.
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Sita's Ramayana
A graphic-novel Ramayana told from Sita's perspective, illustrated by a hereditary Bengali Patua scroll-painter. The format and the viewpoint are both genuinely original; nothing else in English-language Ramayana publishing looks like it.
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Ramayana: Divine Loophole
A Pixar art director's gorgeous full retelling of the Ramayana in his unmistakable neon-pop visual language. 150-plus original paintings, an end-paper deity guide, and a story told straight without academic apology. The most beautiful Ramayana in English for children.
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Ganesha's Sweet Tooth
A bright, playful picture-book origin story for Ganesha's broken tusk, from the team behind Ramayana — Divine Loophole. Same neon-pop palette, scaled down to a single tale with one shining laddoo at its centre.
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The Little Book of Hindu Deities
Sanjay Patel's first book — a small, beautifully illustrated who's-who of the major Hindu gods, demigods, and demons. The visual blueprint that became Ramayana — Divine Loophole four years later.
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The Broken Tusk: Stories of the Hindu God Ganesha
Ten stories about Ganesha drawn from Puranic sources, retold for middle-grade readers with light source notes after each. Older and quieter than Sanjay Patel's Ganesha picture book, and a complement to it.
Buddhist
The Buddha's life, Zen and Chan parables, mindfulness, and the Jātaka tales.
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Zen Shorts
A giant panda named Stillwater arrives in three siblings' garden and tells each of them a Zen story drawn from the Buddhist and Daoist tradition. Watercolour illustrations of unusual delicacy. Caldecott Honor.
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Under the Bodhi Tree: A Story of the Buddha
A clean, picture-book biography of Siddhartha Gautama from sheltered prince to the Bodhi tree to the first sermon. The most readable English-language Buddha biography in print for young children, with watercolour illustrations that match the quiet tone.
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Buddha
Demi's gold-leaf illustrated biography of the Buddha, in the same tradition as her later illustrated lives of Mother Teresa and Gandhi. A picture book that doubles as an art object.
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The Brave Little Parrot
A single Jataka tale — the Buddha as a parrot, flying back and forth to a burning forest with droplets of water on his wings — rendered as a picture book by one of the strongest folktale retellers writing in English.
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The Three Questions
A young boy named Nikolai is trying to answer three questions — when is the right time to do things, who is the most important person, and what is the right thing to do. His friends each give him an answer. Then a wounded panda named Leo enters the story, and Nikolai discovers the answers by living them. Based on a Tolstoy parable, rendered with a Zen sensibility.
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Each Breath a Smile
A small, soft introduction to mindful breathing for very young children, written by Thich Nhat Hanh and adapted from a verse he often taught at his Plum Village retreats. The first Buddhist practice book most American children encounter.
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The Cat Who Went to Heaven
A poor Japanese painter is commissioned to paint a temple scroll of the Buddha's death surrounded by the animals who came to bid him farewell. His housekeeper brings home a small white cat. Newbery Medal winner, 1931 — the second Newbery ever awarded, and still one of the most quietly perfect.
Daoist & Chinese folk
Laozi, Zhuangzi, Chinese folktales, and the Daoist way of seeing the world.
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Lon Po Po: A Red-Riding Hood Story from China
Ed Young's Caldecott Medal-winning retelling of a Chinese folktale that is older and stranger than the European Red Riding Hood. Three sisters home alone meet a wolf at the door who claims to be their grandmother. Ink, pastel, and watercolour panels in the style of Chinese landscape painting.
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Yeh-Shen: A Cinderella Story from China
The Chinese Cinderella — actually nine centuries older than the European version, recorded in a 9th-century Tang manuscript. Ai-Ling Louie retells the source faithfully and Ed Young illustrates in ink-and-pastel panels, six years before he won the Caldecott for Lon Po Po.
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The Great Race: The Story of the Chinese Zodiac
Christopher Corr's brilliantly colourful picture-book retelling of the origin of the Chinese zodiac — the race the Jade Emperor held among the animals to decide the order of the calendar years. The single best zodiac-origin book in English for a child.
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The Stonecutter
A traditional Chinese (and Japanese) tale of a poor stonecutter who is granted his every wish to become something greater, and each thing he becomes is in turn humbled by the next. Demi's gold-leaf illustrations and the spare moral arc make this the cleanest Daoist parable on the Library list for the youngest children.
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The Empty Pot
A traditional Chinese folktale, retold and illustrated by Demi in luminous gold and pastel. An aging emperor announces he will choose his successor by giving each child in the kingdom a single seed and asking them to bring back what they have grown in a year. Ping plants his and waters it faithfully, but nothing comes up. The story turns on what he does next.
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Where the Mountain Meets the Moon
A middle-grade novel that braids a dozen Chinese folktales into a single hero's journey. A girl named Minli leaves her village to find the Old Man of the Moon and ask him to change her family's fortune. Newbery Honor, beautifully illustrated by the author, and the best chapter-book entry on the Library list to Chinese folklore.
Confucian
Confucius's life and the practical ethics that shaped East Asia.
General Eastern wisdom
Stories drawing on several traditions, or fables in the same spirit.
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Zen Shorts
A giant panda named Stillwater arrives in three siblings' garden and tells each of them a Zen story drawn from the Buddhist and Daoist tradition. Watercolour illustrations of unusual delicacy. Caldecott Honor.
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Lon Po Po: A Red-Riding Hood Story from China
Ed Young's Caldecott Medal-winning retelling of a Chinese folktale that is older and stranger than the European Red Riding Hood. Three sisters home alone meet a wolf at the door who claims to be their grandmother. Ink, pastel, and watercolour panels in the style of Chinese landscape painting.
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The Three Questions
A young boy named Nikolai is trying to answer three questions — when is the right time to do things, who is the most important person, and what is the right thing to do. His friends each give him an answer. Then a wounded panda named Leo enters the story, and Nikolai discovers the answers by living them. Based on a Tolstoy parable, rendered with a Zen sensibility.
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Yeh-Shen: A Cinderella Story from China
The Chinese Cinderella — actually nine centuries older than the European version, recorded in a 9th-century Tang manuscript. Ai-Ling Louie retells the source faithfully and Ed Young illustrates in ink-and-pastel panels, six years before he won the Caldecott for Lon Po Po.
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The Great Race: The Story of the Chinese Zodiac
Christopher Corr's brilliantly colourful picture-book retelling of the origin of the Chinese zodiac — the race the Jade Emperor held among the animals to decide the order of the calendar years. The single best zodiac-origin book in English for a child.
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The Stonecutter
A traditional Chinese (and Japanese) tale of a poor stonecutter who is granted his every wish to become something greater, and each thing he becomes is in turn humbled by the next. Demi's gold-leaf illustrations and the spare moral arc make this the cleanest Daoist parable on the Library list for the youngest children.
-
The Empty Pot
A traditional Chinese folktale, retold and illustrated by Demi in luminous gold and pastel. An aging emperor announces he will choose his successor by giving each child in the kingdom a single seed and asking them to bring back what they have grown in a year. Ping plants his and waters it faithfully, but nothing comes up. The story turns on what he does next.
-
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon
A middle-grade novel that braids a dozen Chinese folktales into a single hero's journey. A girl named Minli leaves her village to find the Old Man of the Moon and ask him to change her family's fortune. Newbery Honor, beautifully illustrated by the author, and the best chapter-book entry on the Library list to Chinese folklore.