Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)
Swipe to look inside
Picking Tea with Baba

Picking Tea with Baba

Illustrated by Yu Yin

Hardcover

Picking Tea with Baba

About the Book

Working in a Chinese tea garden is hard work, but it's rewarding when it’s done with family!

This day-in-the-life picture book for 5-9-year-olds engages the senses as it centers around family and working together while celebrating Chinese culture.


A young boy and his brother travel with their parents up the mountainside to their tea garden for a day of work.

They delight in the animals they see, compete to see who can pick the most tea leaves, take a lunch break, and weather an unexpected rainstorm. At the end of the day, they trek back down the mountain to sell the leaves before going home.

A picture book that awakens the senses, young kids experience a faraway cultural tradition while feeling the familiarity of family and togetherness.

Product Details

On sale: May 6, 2025
Age: 5-9 years
Grade: Grades K-4
Page count: 48 Pages
ISBN: 9781623546236

Author Bio

Xu Bin is an author, editor, farmer, and reading education practitioner. He has published many picture books, including With Bamboo and Bicycle Song.

Yu Yin graduated from the China Academy of Art. The Chinese edition of Picking Tea with Baba won the 2021 Beijing International Book Festival Pineapple Circle International Illustration Award and was selected for the 2021 Bratislava International Illustration Competition.

Reviews

♦ A family picks tea leaves on a mountaintop in China.
Mama and the two children (the elder of whom narrates) wake early one morning to accompany Baba to his tea garden. It’s a special treat, as Baba usually goes alone. They eat a filling breakfast in their cramped but cozy home, pack lunches, strap wicker baskets to their backs, and head out. Illustrations depicting their early-morning trek feature foggy landscapes and steep climbs full of wonder. The kids are excited about it all—the bamboo partridges hiding among the plants, the praying mantis they spot, their echoing songs and laughter, the competition to see which of them can pick more tea leaves. It’s tough work and irritating to the skin, but the narrator’s enthusiasm never dims. Even during their lunch break, the kids dart around, picking fruit and fetching water. After a nap, some rain, more partridge sightings, and more work, the sun begins to fall, and a lovely panorama shows families walking down mountain paths with full baskets on their backs. They bring their bags to a bustling tea factory, where the tea farmers line up to sell their harvest. Reminiscent of Diego Rivera’s work, Yu’s artwork, with its bold strokes and earthy colors, lovingly portrays a hardworking farming family. Xu’s text, translated from Chinese, perfectly captures a child’s perspective, acknowledging the characters’ travails while focusing on everyday joys.
A joyful and dignified snapshot of rural family life.
Kirkus Reviews, starred review

Adventure, tea leaves, culture and love swirl throughout every page. Baba, Mama and two young boys prepare for their day of picking tea on the mountain. They begin the day with breakfast and travel up the foggy mountain to the tea field. Hours are spent busily picking leaves, singing folk songs and joking around. The brothers find interesting bugs, fetch cool water and experience the unpredictable rain clouds on top of the mountain. The leaves are then sold at the village in front of the tea factory. A wonderful read for elementary students to not only practice gratitude but really start to think about where certain items come from and who does the backbreaking job of allowing us to enjoy things like tea, coffee and other products. The pictures are absolutely breathtaking and highlight the beauty of the village, nature and the family that is working together to make a living. A must read for all elementary students, teachers, counselors and librarians. An educational treasure.
Children's Literature