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[ °ü·Ã µ¿¿µ»ó º¸±â ]
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[ ¼Áö Á¤º¸ ]
Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 1524719919
ISBN-13: 978-1524719913
Ã¥ Å©±â: 26 cm x 26 cm
[ ¿µ¹® ¼Æò ]
Book Description
Who belongs in the fruit bowl? Apples, check. Blueberries, check. Tomato, che-- Wait, what?! Tomato wants to join the other fruits, but does he belong? The perfect mix of botany and a bunch of bananas!
All the fruit are in the bowl. There's Apple and Orange. Strawberry and Peach. Plum and Pear. And, of course, Tomato.
Now wait just a minute! Tomatoes aren't fruit! Or are they?
Using sly science (and some wisdom from a wise old raisin), Tomato proves all the fruit wrong and shows that he belongs in the bowl just as much as the next blueberry! And he's bringing some unexpected friends too!
Publishers Weekly *Starred Review*
"A fun, brain-teasing food literacy lesson that's a cornucopia of produce and wordplay. In his first foray as writer and illustrator, Hoffmann (illustrator of You Can Read) offers a fun, brain-teasing food literacy lesson that¡¯s a cornucopia of produce and wordplay."
School Library Journal
"An a-peel-ing addition."
Kirkus Reviews
Is a tomato a fruit or a vegetable? Ripe with puns, this tale turns on the question.In word bubbles, an off-page child converses with a bevy of colorful, anthropomorphized foodstuffs while putting the produce away: "How's everyone doing?" Lemon's "Full of zest." Strawberry says, "I was jammed in that bag." When the tomato tries to climb into the fruit bowl, everyone questions his right. Tomato then lectures those assembled: Fruits develop from flowers, while veggies might be leaves, stems (asparagus), petals (artichokes, anyone?), or roots. He produces a wacky X-ray showing not only his seeds, but the bones of his skinny arms and legs. Each fruit and vegetable in Hoffmann's digitally composed, hand-lettered gouache pictures sports simple facial features and sticklike limbs. The male tomato and "Old Man Produce"--a wizened prune with bushy gray brows--are explicitly gendered, while a lemon and pepper have full lips and eyelashes, implying they are female. The Old Man delivers a rambling, Zen-like speech that muddies the already-sketchy science. With their new knowledge, a pepper, bean, eggplant, cuke, avocado, snow pea, and yellow squash line up to climb the fruit bowl's ladder. Hoffmann's premise is a bit shaky. Some veggies are typically unrefrigerated (think potatoes), some fruits are regularly kept chilled, and many of those newly ensconced denizens of this fruit bowl (from peppers to squash) keep better in the fridge. |
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