Chris K. Soentpiet (born January 3, 1970, in Seoul) is a Korean American children's book illustrator and author. He was born in Seoul, South Korea, in 1970. At age 8, he moved to Hawaii to live with his adoptive family.[1] A year later, the Soentpiets relocated to Portland, Oregon. Soentpiet currently lives and works in New York City.
Around Town, a picture book written and illustrated by Soentpiet, marked the artist's debut in 1994. Today, Soentpiet is recognized as an award-winning illustrator in the children's book industry. His books have received numerous honors, including, but not limited to, the International Reading Association Teachers' Choice Award, NAACP Image Award, Parents' Choice Gold Award, Parents Magazine Best Children's Book of the Year, North Carolina Children's Book Award, Georgia Children's Picture Book Award, International Reading Association Notable Children's Book for a Global Society, and ALA Notable Book. Soentpiet is active on the school visit circuit.[citation needed]
Soentpiet's research for the picture chapter book Peacebound Trains (author: Haemi Balgassi) took him back to his country of birth, South Korea, for the first time since his adoption in 1978. In 1996, Soentpiet won the Society of Illustrators Gold Medal for his paintings in Peacebound Trains. The United States Department of Defense published an online edition of the book and featured it, complete with a Teacher Activity Guide, on the United States of America Korean War Commemoration site. Peacebound Trains is the only book to receive this honor.[citation needed]
On his official website and a number of interviews, the artist credits Ted Lewin and Betsy Lewin for encouraging him to pursue a career as a children's book illustrator.[citation needed]
Awards and honors
Three of the books Soentpiet illustrated are Junior Library Guild selections: So Far from the Sea (1998),[2]Coolies (2001),[3] and Brothers (2007).[4] The Association for Library Service to Children has named three of the books Soentpiet illustrated as Notable Children's Books: More Than Anything Else (1996),[5]Molly Bannaky (2000),[6] and Coolies (2002).[7] In 1995, the Smithsonian named The Last Dragon by Susan Miho Nunes among the year's Notable Books for Children.[8]
Soentpiet's books have also received the following accolades:
1995, 1996: American Bookseller Pick of the List
1995, 1997: Notable Children's Trade Books in the Field of Social Studies
Yin (2002). Dear Santa, Please Come to the 19th Floor. New York: Philomel Books. ISBN978-0-399-23636-5.[27]
Farris, Christine King (2003). My Brother Martin: A Sister Remembers Growing Up with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers. ISBN978-0-689-84387-7.[28]
Raven, Margot Theis (2008). Happy birthday to you! the mystery behind the most famous song in the world. Chelsea, Michigan: Sleeping Bear Press. ISBN978-1-58536-169-4.[31]