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Edition : Hardcover: 32 pages
ISBN-10: 068983196X
ISBN-13: 978-0689831966
Ã¥ Å©±â : 26cm x 21cm
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Book Description
Eggs, eggs, eggs -- everyone wants eggs! But do they want the same kinds of eggs? NO! Some prefer scrambled, some like fried, and some even want them raw.
The only thing the hungry customers at this bustling diner seem to have in common is a desire for "TWO EGGS, PLEASE!"
At the heart of this clever new look at similarities and differences by acclaimed author Sarah Weeks and Caldecott Honor-winning illustrator Betsy Lewin is an age-old truth -- it's what's inside that counts.
Publishers Weekly
In this witty and wise book "two eggs," served in diverse ways, become a metaphor for how much individuals have in common, no matter what their tastes. Late one night in a diner, a slender orange fox awaits her customers. In the opening wordless spread, readers observe the first customer arriving in his yellow taxi. In the next, the rhino cabbie orders ("Two eggs please. Sunny-side up"), followed by a rat musician carrying a double bass and sporting a tux ("Two eggs, please. Over easy"). The long counter fills up: a stork in green scrubs prefers "Scrambled," and a green alligator with a pierced nose and his pet boa constrictor orders for both-"Poached. My friend here would like a couple of raw ones." Although the customers do not chat, they steal glances at each other. Thought bubbles reveal their shared observation: "Different." This motif repeats as the ursine chef holds up a white and a brown egg in one paw ("Different"), then cracks them into a dish ("The same"). When the waitress calls, "Two eggs coming up!", she addresses everyone in the place. Yet in the closing spread, the customers eat their two eggs in peace, side by side. Readers must reach their own understanding. Weeks (Mrs. McNosh Hangs Up Her Wash) uses repetitive but not monotonous language; Lewin works in the loose lines of her Click, Clack, Moo and reinforces the main point in expressive watercolors. Even the typefaces, which change with each customer, call attention to the coexistence of individuality and community. At this city diner, readers of all persuasions get food for thought.
Children's Literature
This is a delightful book about the early morning orders for eggs at a neighborhood diner. Readers will laugh out loud as each character enters the diner, ordering two eggs. The characters are different kinds of animals and the orders are for different kinds of eggs. Sunny-side up, over easy, scrambled, soft-boiled, hard-boiled, on a roll, fried, poached ( you name it, the diner has it. Occasionally, an animal will think the word "different" as yet another order is heard across the diner. In fact, the only dialogue within the book is that concerning the egg orders. Conversation between the animals does not exist, but is not missed. The charm and entertainment is within the illustrations and the irony of so many different animals, so many different orders, and only one kind of food? eggs! Teachers, parents, and readers alike will love realizing the not-so-subtle message. We all have differences, yet we are all alike. This book is a great springboard for conversation concerning differences and how to embrace them. The young child will memorize the text quickly and feel empowered in the ability to read such a great book. The pictures are forever entertaining, offering something new every time you look at the pages.
School Library Journal
Weeks and Lewin do a superb job of exploring the concept of things being different and the same. The setting is a busy diner at breakfast time, where personified animals request two eggs prepared in different manners. The customers include a rhino, a mouse, a pelican, two canine cops, a gorilla and her baby, a ram, and a crocodile with a snake. Each one is rendered in the artist's distinctive and amusing watercolor cartoons, created with an economy of line and an abundance of personality. The "foxy" waitress and a big bear of a cook round out the charming and identifiable cast. A thoroughly delightful treat for both early readers and young listeners.
Kirkus Reviews
A clever, minimally verbal introduction to "same, but different" that takes too long to make its point. Each animal customer that walks into Lewin뭩 brightly lit, exuberantly drawn diner orders two eggs, but each wants them done a different way: sunny side up, over easy, scrambled, even (for an alligator뭩 pet boa) raw. But the customers enter one at a time, most taking up a whole spread to do so, and the pace is further slowed by spreads in which all sit there sharing the same thought: "Different." Finally the counter attendant shouts out all the orders in sequence--in plain language rather than restaurant jargon, which may disappoint readers hoping for another Frank and Ernest (1988)--then delivers them, cooked (or not) to order, demonstrating "Different . . . but the same." It뭩 a difficult, abstract concept that has engaged every philosopher since Plato뭩 day; children may be able to get a handle on it here, but they뭠l need both a large fund of patience, and an adult to fill in the gaps. |
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