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Annette Bay Pimentel - Mountain Chef: How One Man Lost His Groceries, Changed His Plans, and Helped Cook Up the National Park Service

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Annette Bay Pimentel Mountain Chef: How One Man Lost His Groceries, Changed His Plans, and Helped Cook Up the National Park Service
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Mountain Chef: How One Man Lost His Groceries, Changed His Plans, and Helped Cook Up the National Park Service: summary, description and annotation

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The true story of a Chinese American mountain man who fed thirty people for ten days in the wilderness--and helped inspire the creation of the National Park Service. Tie Sing was born in the mountains. The mountains were in his blood. But because he was of Chinese descent at a time in America when to be Chinese meant working in restaurants or laundries, Tie Sings prospects were limited. But he had bigger plans. He began cooking for mapmakers and soon built a reputation as the best trail cook in California. When millionaire Stephen Mather began his quest to create a national park service in 1915, he invited a group of influential men-writers, tycoons, members of Congress, and even a movie star-to go camping in the Sierras. Tie Sing was hired to cook. Tie Sing planned diligently. He understood the importance of this trip. But when disaster struck-twice!-and Tie Sings supplies were lost, it was his creative spirit and quick mind that saved the day. His sumptuous menus had to be struck and Tie Sing had to start over in order to feed the thirty people in the group for ten whole days. His skills were tested and Tie Sing rose to the challenge. On the last night, he fed not just the campers bodies, but also their minds, reminding them to remember and protect the mountains. 2016 marks the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service, created by Congress on August 25, 1916. Today, you can hike to Sing Peak, named for Tie Sing, in Yosemite National Park.

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Mountain Chef By Annette Bay Pimentel Illustrated by Rich Lo 978-1-58089-711-2 - photo 1
Mountain Chef
By Annette Bay Pimentel
Illustrated by Rich Lo
978-1-58089-711-2 * $16.95 HC
8 x 11 * 40 pages * Ages 6-9
HC 978-1-58089-711-2
ebook 978-1-60734-878-8
ebook pdf 978-1-60734-879-5
Carton QTY: 12
Long may you search the mountains.
--from a fortune cookie written by Tie Sing for one of the
influential men on the fateful trip that gave rise to the National Park
Service.
The true story of a Chinese American mountain man who fed thirty people
for ten days in the wilderness--and helped inspire the creation of the
National Park Service.
Tie Sing was born in the mountains. The mountains were in his blood. But
because he was of Chinese descent at a time in America when to be
Chinese meant working in restaurants or laundries, Tie Sings prospects
were limited. But he had bigger plans. He began cooking for mapmakers
and soon built a reputation as the best trail cook in California.
When millionaire Stephen Mather began his quest to create a national park
service in 1915, he invited a group of influential menwriters, tycoons,
members of Congress, and even a movie starto go camping in the
Sierras. Tie Sing was hired to cook.
Tie Sing planned diligently. He understood the importance of this trip. But
when disaster strucktwice!and Tie Sings supplies were lost, it was his
creative spirit and quick mind that saved the day. His sumptuous menus
had to be struck and Tie Sing had to start over in order to feed the thirty
people in the group for ten whole days. His skills were tested and Tie Sing
rose to the challenge.
On the last night, he fed not just the campers' bodies, but also their minds,
reminding them to remember and protect the mountains.
2016 marks the 100th anniversary of the National Park Service, created by
Congress on August 25, 1916.
Today, you can hike to Sing Peak, named for Tie Sing, in Yosemite
National Park.
Annette Bay Pimentel Illustrated by Rich Lo How One Man Lost His Groceries - photo 2
Annette Bay Pimentel Illustrated by Rich Lo How One Man Lost His Groceries - photo 3
Annette Bay Pimentel Illustrated by Rich Lo
How One Man
Lost His Groceries,
Changed His Plans, and
Helped Cook Up the
National Park Service
Mountain
Chef
Text copyright 2016 by Annette Bay Pimentel Illustrations copyright 2016 by - photo 4
Text copyright 2016 by Annette Bay Pimentel
Illustrations copyright 2016 by Rich Lo
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
Charlesbridge and colophon are registered trademarks of Charlesbridge Publishing, Inc.
Published by Charlesbridge
85 Main Street
Watertown, MA 02472
(617) 926-0329
www.charlesbridge.com
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Pimentel, Annette Bay, author. | Lo, Rich, illustrator.
Title: Mountain chef: how one man lost his groceries, changed his plans, and helped
cook up the National Park Service/Annette Bay Pimentel; illustrated by Rich Lo.
Description: Watertown, MA: Charlesbridge, [2016]
Identifiers: LCCN 2015040753 | ISBN 9781580897112 (reinforced for library use) |
ISBN 9781607348788 (ebook) | ISBN 9781607348795 (ebook pdf)
Subjects: LCSH: Sing, TieJuvenile literature. | Mather, Stephen Tyng, 18671930
Juvenile literature. | United States. National Park ServiceHistoryJuvenile
literature. | CooksBiographyJuvenile literature. | Chinese Americans
BiographyJuvenile literature. | CampingCaliforniaHistoryJuvenile
literature.
Classification: LCC TX649.S494 P56 2016 | DDC 641.5092dc23 LC record available at
http://lccn.loc.gov/2015040753
Printed in China
(hc) 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Pencil drawings and watercolor washes done on paper,
then scanned and layered in Photoshop
Type set in Estro by Mecanorma
Color separations by Colourscan Print Co Pte Ltd, Singapore
Printed by 1010 Printing International Limited in Huizhou, Guangdong, China
Production supervision by Brian G. Walker
Designed by Susan Mallory Sherman
For Grandad, whose Bryce Canyon story
sent me looking for this one, and, of course, for DavidA. B. P.
Dedicated to my parents, who kept the family together
through tough times in a culture and country
they knew very little aboutR. L.
Special thanks to Yenyen F. Chan, Park Ranger,
Yosemite National Park, for her invaluable expertise and
for her unflagging patience with my stream of questionsA. B. P.
Synchred Read-Along Version by:
Triangle Interactive LLC
PO Box 573
Prior Lake, MN 55372
ISBN-13: 978-1-68444-705-3 (e-book)
Tie Sing was a frontier baby born high in the mountains in Virginia City - photo 5
Tie Sing was a frontier baby, born high in the
mountains in Virginia City, Nevada. Growing up, he
breathed crisp Sierra air and scuffed through sagebrush.
He learned to write in both English and Chinese.
America was a tough place to be Chinese Bosses paid Chinese workers less - photo 6
America was a tough place to be Chinese. Bosses paid
Chinese workers less than white workers. Townsfolk spat
out Chinese names like theyd swallowed river gravel.
Most people with Chinese names ended up cooking in
restaurants or washing clothes in laundries. Tie Sing,
though, had American dirt under his fingernailsand
dreams as big as the country he loved. Cramped shacks
werent for him. He made plansbig plans.
He got a job cooking for mapmakers as they tramped through the mountains - photo 7
He got a job cooking for mapmakers as they tramped
through the mountains, naming peaks. With sky for his
ceiling and sequoias for his walls, he stirred silky sauces,
broiled succulent steaks, and tossed crisp salads. In his
sheet-metal oven, he baked sourdough rolls as light as
the clouds drifting above the peaks. His reputation grew:
the best trail cook in California!
In 1915 Tie Sing got his most important job yet A millionaire named Stephen - photo 8
In 1915 Tie Sing got his most important job yet.
A millionaire named Stephen Mather was trying to
convince lawmakers to create a national park service to
protect the countrys natural wonders. But in the city,
the roar of business drowned out his talk of mountains
and trees and animals. So Mather invited writers,
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