Field with a Moose
• Price : 11,000KRW
• Product Dimensions :
230x240, 40pages
• Publication Date : 2013-04-22
• ISBN : 978-89-5828-668-4
Book Information & Summary
Written and illustrated by Kim Byung Ha
The story of conflict, sympathy, and reconciliation between humans and animals in the mother nature
This story starts with the scene of ‘a small field ruined by a moose’, but it turned out to be ‘a field for a moose’ in the end. That means people changed their ways to see a moose. People began to see a moose as a being they need to share the field with, not a being which ruined their field.
From some time long ago, there has been so much news about wild animal appearance. What made wild animals have come down all the way to the village where people live? Nothing provides them with abundant food ? not the river, not the forest. That is because humans developed the mountains and the fields to fulfill their needs to have more as quickly as possible, and also humans must have taken the remaining things before the wild animals.
The author does not mention the wild animal issue directly, but he tries to find a solution by taking a small but practical action to share the field with animals. This could be the chance to reflect on ourselves whether we did not invade or ruin their living land, before blaming the wild animals for causing harm on crops.
The story of conflict, sympathy, and reconciliation between humans and animals in the mother nature
This story starts with the scene of ‘a small field ruined by a moose’, but it turned out to be ‘a field for a moose’ in the end. That means people changed their ways to see a moose. People began to see a moose as a being they need to share the field with, not a being which ruined their field.
From some time long ago, there has been so much news about wild animal appearance. What made wild animals have come down all the way to the village where people live? Nothing provides them with abundant food ? not the river, not the forest. That is because humans developed the mountains and the fields to fulfill their needs to have more as quickly as possible, and also humans must have taken the remaining things before the wild animals.
The author does not mention the wild animal issue directly, but he tries to find a solution by taking a small but practical action to share the field with animals. This could be the chance to reflect on ourselves whether we did not invade or ruin their living land, before blaming the wild animals for causing harm on crops.
Editor’s Note
_Quingdao Publishing (China)