Publisher's Hardcover ©2024 | -- |
Vegetable soup. Juvenile fiction.
Rabbits. Juvenile fiction.
Dreams. Juvenile fiction.
Soups. Fiction.
Cooking (Vegetables). Fiction.
Rabbits. Fiction.
Dreams. Fiction.
A rabbit learns a lesson in doing what he loves best-for the right reasonsIt's the first day of autumn, which means it's time for the debonair Mr. Lepron and his children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren to pick vegetables and herbs so he can make his special soup. The meal is loved by all, sparking word-of-mouth buzz that brings throngs of animals and diverse people to his forest abode to partake. The business-minded hare soon decides to mass-market his confection, with "a big brick building where soup will be made around the clock." As his soup becomes more famous, his dreams, once calming and a contributing factor to the delicacy's tastiness, become frenzied and anxious, depicted as surreal nightmares, in stark contrast to the light, airy visions of the past. Customers no longer appreciate the soup as much. Realizing that he's changed, Mr. Lepron closes his business and retires to the forest, where he does what he enjoys most: spending time with family (and cooking soup now and again). Zoboli's lengthy, descriptive text, translated from Italian, and Di Giorgio's watercolor, gouache, and colored pencil art, together infuse Mr. Lepron with a deep humanity and construct a compelling, dreamy world that harkens back to the past in its tone and look but, with its nods to the all-consuming nature of capitalism, feels grounded in current realities, much like their previous collaboration,Professional Crocodile (2017).A clever, compassionate, and elegantly wrought reminder to do what makes you happy.(Picture book. 5-8)
ALA Booklist (Mon Dec 09 00:00:00 CST 2024)In this Italian important, rabbit home cook Mr. Lepron becomes renowned for his extraordinary vegetable soup. When he makes soup at home, he takes a nap, and his dreams add special flavor to the cooking soup. Mr. Lepron shares his delicious soup (made seasonally from local vegetables) with family and friends, then eventually expands to sell multiple flavors of canned soup throughout the world. In the process, though, Mr. Lepron loses his secret ingredient: his dreams. In the end, he decides to close his factories and return to his dreamy home cooking. Is the story a metaphor for the woes of capitalism or an homage to local food and cooks? It's not entirely clear, but it does succeed on its own merits. Di Giorgio's lush illustrations have a sense of humor visible in details om cans of soup to witchy dreams. Appropriately, though, the illustrations reveal their greatest warmth in the vegetables gathered by Mr. Lepron's extended family and in the family gatherings at which they eat the amazing soup. Mysteriously beautiful.
Kirkus ReviewsA rabbit learns a lesson in doing what he loves best-for the right reasonsIt's the first day of autumn, which means it's time for the debonair Mr. Lepron and his children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren to pick vegetables and herbs so he can make his special soup. The meal is loved by all, sparking word-of-mouth buzz that brings throngs of animals and diverse people to his forest abode to partake. The business-minded hare soon decides to mass-market his confection, with "a big brick building where soup will be made around the clock." As his soup becomes more famous, his dreams, once calming and a contributing factor to the delicacy's tastiness, become frenzied and anxious, depicted as surreal nightmares, in stark contrast to the light, airy visions of the past. Customers no longer appreciate the soup as much. Realizing that he's changed, Mr. Lepron closes his business and retires to the forest, where he does what he enjoys most: spending time with family (and cooking soup now and again). Zoboli's lengthy, descriptive text, translated from Italian, and Di Giorgio's watercolor, gouache, and colored pencil art, together infuse Mr. Lepron with a deep humanity and construct a compelling, dreamy world that harkens back to the past in its tone and look but, with its nods to the all-consuming nature of capitalism, feels grounded in current realities, much like their previous collaboration,Professional Crocodile (2017).A clever, compassionate, and elegantly wrought reminder to do what makes you happy.(Picture book. 5-8)
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
ALA Booklist (Mon Dec 09 00:00:00 CST 2024)
Kirkus Reviews
Stunning artwork from the acclaimed illustrator of The Midnight Fair illuminates a sweet cautionary tale about a rabbit whose fabled soup-making gets away from him.
Mr. Lepron is a rabbit who lives in a cozy burrow with many offspring. Every year on the first day of autumn, he reaps vegetables from the farmer’s garden—carrots, onions, celery, beans, aromatic herbs, and much more—and makes the best soup on earth, adored by his family. As it simmers, he dozes and dreams of being a famous cook, hosted by kings. And sure enough, his soup is so good that it starts drawing creatures from all over—until one day a factory springs up in the woods, with Mr. Lepron presiding day and night and soup cans for sale in all the most renowned shops. But as demand rises, Mr. Lepron’s dreams become fretful, and soon he starts hearing complaints: his soup is not as good as it was. Has his recipe changed—or has Mr. Lepron? How can he recapture the joy he once shared with his family? Mariachiara Di Giorgio’s exquisitely detailed artwork appears lit from within as it captures the pastoral setting, a range of expressive forest animals, Mr. Lepron’s fitful dreamscapes, and the palpable sense of peace as he rediscovers what truly matters.