I am grateful to NetGalley, Oni Press, and Katie O’Neill for the opportunity to read this book, the third in the Tea Dragon series, which I review thankfully, without prejudice.
The Tea Dragon Society was the winner of the 2018 Eisner Award for Best Publication for kids 9-12! Yay, Katie O'Neill! It was followed by The Tea Dragon Festival.
Entitled The Tea Dragon Tapestry, this third volume that appears to conclude a trilogy maintains the tone and warmth of the original and deepens the reach of the project. I guess you could say it both focuses on the making of a tapestry and is also a tapestry of the rich world it creates. The heart of this volume is the addition to and recognition of grief and loss as important parts of one’s personal tapestry.
Both Tea Dragon Ginseng and Minette experience grief and loss in this volume, and this is part of life and growth, of course,. Minette seems to have lost her sense of purpose; but with the help of a visit from ner Ancestor, she completes a tapestry that she began working on when she lived in the monastery where she practiced ritual arts. Greta is testing to be an artisan apprentice. She makes a bowl for sad Ginseng, to communicate her love and support for this tea dragon.
"Everything that happens is part of your wholeness. The sadness, the loss, the hurt, as well as the joy, the love, the friendship--it is all part of your tapestry."
(As someone who has just lost a sister in this past week, I can attest to the importance of working through grief and loss in one’s life as ultimately enriching)..
On the surface, adorable would seem to be the central purpose of this fantasy world, since all the colors of the digital art, all the designs, and all the characters, are warm and cute with an appeal to pet-owners and friendships and playing nice with others everywhere. Under the surface of adorableness, ia deeper purpose is warmth and compassion and goodness.
There’s a certain nostalgia or “old world” commitment in it, too: We have blacksmiths (and apprentices), we have a nearby monastery, and we drink a lot of tea! Discipline and order matter. Spirituality matters. Traditions, and our relationship to nature, matter. They gather wild rosemary! This is a world that values beauty and slowness, leisure, and love and friendship..
Diversity also matters. We have inter-species relationships, a range of colors/ethnicities, sizes, folks in wheelchairs, deaf folks. And then we also have kids with antlers and extra (animal) ears! We have tea dragons named Chamomile and Ginseng and Jasmine and many more.. An appendix explains tea dragon biology and culture and so on. A lovely sweet fantasy world from Katie O’Neill. It's less about story than atmopshee and tone and attitude, and that is just fine. We get to know the characters and feel warmly toward them.