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  1. Taro Yashima was the pseudonym of Atsushi Iwamatsu, a Japanese artist who lived in the United Staes during World War II. Iwamatsu was born September 21, 1908, in Nejima, Kimotsuki District, Kagoshima, and raised on the southern coast of Kyushu…. More about Taro Yashima.

  2. Taro Yashima is the assumed name of children’s author and illustrator Jun Atsushi Iwamatsu. Because of his involvement during World War II with the Office of Strategic Services, he could not use his real name. He was born in the Japanese village of Kagoshima on the southern peninsula of Kyushu. He studied at the Imperial Art Academy in Tokyo ...

  3. Taro Yashima. Umbrella, 1958. Written and Illustrated by Taro Yashima. Taro Yashima was born in September 1908 near Kagoshima, Japan. His birth name was Jun Atsushi Iwmatsu. Yashima's father, a collector of oriental art, encouraged his son's artistic ways. Yashima studied at the Imperial Art Academy in Tokyo after high school.

  4. 11 de sept. de 2011 · Taro Yashima: an unsung beacon for all against 'evil on this Earth'. First of two parts. A little boy cannot be found at his village school. He is hiding under its floorboards. His name is Chibi ...

  5. June 3, 2013. "Crow Boy" by Taro Yashima is a winner of the Caldecott Honor Book, but also is on the list of young children’s books that have been challenged. Taro Yashima created story about tiny boy name Chibi, who lives in small Japanese village, who is going to school and who is treated unkindly by his classmates.

  6. by Taro Yashima. “Umbrella was made for Taro Yashima’s daughter for her eighth birth-. day, but it is also a gift for every child—and grown-ups as well—so. tenderly does it convey the excitement and pleasure of a small child. with her first umbrella and red rubber boots, and the wonder of life.

  7. www.kirkusreviews.com › book-reviews › taro-yashimaUMBRELLA | Kirkus Reviews

    9 de dic. de 2013 · Momo longed to carry the blue umbrella and wear the bright red rubber boots she had been given on her third birthday. But day after day Indian summer continued. Momo tried to tell mother she needed to carry the umbrella to nursery school because the sunshine bothered her eyes. But Mother didn't let her use the umbrella then or when she said the wind bothered her. At last, though, rain fell on ...