cover image My Indigo World: A True Story of the Color Blue

My Indigo World: A True Story of the Color Blue

Rosa Chang. MineditionUS, $17.99 (40p) ISBN 978-1-66265-065-9

Chang’s autobiographical debut starts off recounting a childhood encounter with indigo dye in Korea, where she first fell in love with “the strong shade of blue sky we called jjok.” Later, as an adult in Baltimore, she is given indigo seeds by a friend, and experiential text invites readers to join a community of people, portrayed with various skin tones, tilling soil and tending indigo seedlings in a neighborhood farm until the leaves get large enough “to cover the palm of my hand.” “But how do we get a blue dye from these green plants?” Careful time-lapse paintings of a jar of water-covered indigo leaves grows gradually bluer, intensified with pickling lime. The dyers talk about what indigo means to them (“I think indigo is the color in which lives the spirit and soul of my people,” one unattributed quotation reads) and Chang acknowledges indigo’s historical connection to the labor of enslaved people (“It is important to remember the pain along with the joy”). Indigo-dyed textiles form a backdrop for watercolor portraits of individuals working with the dye in this heartfelt personal reflection about community and heritage. Ages 4–8. (May)