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Lion, king, and coin

di Jeong-hee Nam

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2613896,513 (3.8)11
Laos enjoys his life in ancient Turkey. His father and grandfather are famous for crafting gold into beautiful objects, and Laos helps in their market stall, bartering golf for food and livestock. But exchanging such different goods is complicated. They need something to represent the value of their goods -- and so the king gives Laos's family the very important task of creating the world's first currency.… (altro)
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A wonderful introduction to economics and the invention of the coin. Laos is living in ancient Turkey and helps his father and grandfather at the market where people barter for food and livestock. Includes Notes on History, Key Terms, Timeline.
  NCSS | Jul 23, 2021 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
"Lion, King, and Coin" is a historical fiction picture book introducing the use of coins as currency in ancient Sardis.

Its strongest points are the illustrations, historical information at the back, and the inclusion of the Midas Touch myth as explanation for why their particular river contains so much gold.

The first-person narrative seems stilted at times: descriptions of the panning and smithing processes are interesting, but at the end, the family is still running a gold stall at the market. "My uncle's stall is peaceful now. All he does is sell pieces of gold and accept coins in exchange." ... but the coins were made (of gold, of course) by the family. Why are they still selling raw gold and accepting the coins they manufactured (an arduous process, it would seem: "It was hard work to make a coin."), without mention of how they were compensated for having also become the royal mint.

The problem doesn't seem well presented: the uncles complains that he traded gold for a cow, but the cow ran away. Wouldn't he still need a cow at some point to provide for the family? It seems the solution to his problem might be a fence, or putting our young narrator in charge of watching the cow, but creating coinage is rather a leap.

Especially since it isn't particularly clear what problem, exactly, needs to be solved, this particular family really seems to be out a lot of labor with the solution.

I liked this book on first reading, but when I started describing it for this review I realized I wasn't all that impressed...

Still, the illustrations are lovely: stylized and evocative; they make the book enjoyable despite its "plot holes." If I were reading to a very young child, I would probably alter the text. If used for older children, I would encourage them to focus on the timeline and historical information at the back.
  theresearcher | Aug 15, 2017 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Lion, King, and Coin is a lovely yet educational story by Jeong-hee Nam. Concerning how and why currency, similar to what we use today for commerce, was developed, this story takes the young reader into the distant past to Sardis, the capital of Lydia (modern day Turkey). We follow a young boy named Laos as he observes his merchant father and uncle in how they traded goods each day with local shoppers. Through a set of circumstances, they begin to mint and use gold coins for trade - and in a simplistic manner, the reasoning of how and why currency was developed is presented.

Not being a teacher, I do not know how I would use this book in a classroom, but as an older retried woman who watches children between the ages of 5 and 8, 3 days a week, I used it during one of our quiet reading times. There is good information in the back of the book to guide the "teacher" as s/he reads the book so the children will understand the terms, location, etc. that is discussed in the book.

The artwork is lovely - not overly done and several of "my children" spent time just looking at the pages after we read and talked about the story and what we learned.

Without outside information, it is a nice story but not truly educational so it is important for guidance if you are using it for that reason. If it is 'just to read' there is no problem. It is not offensive in any manner, a child can read it solo. Over all I enjoyed the book. ( )
  PallanDavid | Jun 12, 2017 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
Lovely, interesting and different. ( )
  TildenSchoolLibrary | Jun 6, 2017 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
This was a really enjoyable book. I liked the content and particularly loved the last few pages where you learned concrete facts. As a licensed teacher I question the reading level of this book, though I could see reading this to all ages of elementary students. The sentence structure of the main story is easy enough to entertain elementary students while the content and last few pages are more than enough information for the later years of elementary school. The illustrations were amazing. 4.5/5 ( )
  WhitneyG182 | May 1, 2017 |
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Laos enjoys his life in ancient Turkey. His father and grandfather are famous for crafting gold into beautiful objects, and Laos helps in their market stall, bartering golf for food and livestock. But exchanging such different goods is complicated. They need something to represent the value of their goods -- and so the king gives Laos's family the very important task of creating the world's first currency.

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