Shanghai Daily

Children’s books stoke imaginatio­n, buoy publishers

- Yao Minji

Amagical white deer saves a fisherman from drowning. The fisherman then captures the deer and sells it to a monster. He is punished by the god of the mountain.

“Tale of the White Deer,” a modern retelling of a very ancient legend, was exhibited at the recent China Shanghai Internatio­nal Children’s Book Fair. The book, illustrate­d by Ma Penghao, with text by author Zhang Jinjiang, feeds the imaginatio­n of children enchanted by stories of mythical beasts.

Last year, Ma, in collaborat­ion with author Peng Xuejun, enchanted fair goers with “Granny Xiu and the Peach Blossom Fish,” a story drawn from the legends of elderly witches that fascinated Peng in her childhood in the mountains of Hunan Province.

Children’s books are more than just flights of fantasy for the young. They are also big business for authors and publishers, as the three-day fair reminded us.

Wrapping up this year with around 1,500 copyright and collaborat­ion deals, the fair goes from strength to strength.

The exhibition space was expanded, and there was a 30 percent rise in new exhibitors from countries such as Colombia, Iran, Latvia, Lebanon, Ukraine and the United Arab Emirates.

In 2022, the fair will celebrate its 10th anniversar­y with double exhibition space, according to Zeng Yuan, from the Shanghai Press and Publicatio­n Bureau.

“It’s a very ambitious vision,” Zeng, the newly appointed mastermind behind the fair, told Shanghai Daily.

China has become a big market for children’s books, and Shanghai’s prominence as a center of commerce and culture is promoting the trend. Many internatio­nal publishers and agents visiting the city said they were impressed by the fair’s scope and the book business in the city.

“I’m seeing a very big difference here,” said Cecilia de la Campa, executive director for global licensing and domestic partnershi­ps of American literary agency Writers House.

“Children’s books around the world have been a steady market, and the Chinese market is booming right now,” she said. “We sell almost everything available very quickly, and we are now pre-selling titles that will be published in the States in 2022.”

De la Campa was part of the SHVIP program with 11 other publishers from around the world. The program invites internatio­nal publishers to visit local publishers, bookstores and the fair to take the pulse of the market.

She said she particular­ly noticed the heavy focus on picture books, the scope of Chinese talent and lack of young adult books.

“Picture books and the talent of Chinese authors are fascinatin­g,” she said.

“I’m very excited about what we can take back to publishing houses in the US. The exchange works both ways.”

Many Chinese publishers and authors have used the fair to introduce themselves to the internatio­nal book market, with hundreds of copyrights sold across the world since the fair started seven years ago, especially in picture books.

Illustrato­r Ma said deals signed at the fair call for “Tale of the White Deer” to be published in Malaysia and Italy.

The book is part of a series that modernizes and reinterpre­ts legends from “Classic of Mountains and Seas,” dating back to the 4th century BC. It gives a mythical geographic­al account that traces more than 500 mountains and 300 waterways and the

 ??  ?? You’re never too young to start appreciati­ng books, as a toddler at the book fair shows.
You’re never too young to start appreciati­ng books, as a toddler at the book fair shows.
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