How Are You Peeling?: Foods with Moods
How Are You Peeling?: Foods with Moods
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Paperback ©1999--
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Annotation: Brief text and photographs of carvings made from vegetables introduce the world of emotions by presenting leading questions such as "Are you feeling angry?"
 
Reviews: 6
Catalog Number: #4734149
Format: Paperback
Copyright Date: 1999
Edition Date: 2004 Release Date: 06/01/04
Pages: 1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN: 0-439-59841-9
ISBN 13: 978-0-439-59841-5
Dewey: 152.4
LCCN: 99018162
Dimensions: 26 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
School Library Journal Starred Review (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)

PreS-Gr 2-An eye-catching and enormously appealing book. Freymann and Elffers frequented New York's fruit and vegetable markets, picking out particularly "expressive" onions, peppers, oranges, apples, and the like. They then created intriguing faces on the produce, taking advantage of stems and creases, carving mouths, and adding black-eyed peas for eyes. The sculptures were then photographed on solid-colored backgrounds. The "faces" clearly show an array of emotions, from excitement and happiness to frustration and confusion. Accompanied by simple rhymes ("When you have to wait, because someone is late,/are you bored? Jumpy? Worried? Grumpy?/Excited as the minutes pass?/Now your friend is here at last!"), the attractive photographs burst with color. Use this book to discuss different moods, to introduce the names of many fruits and vegetables, to identify colors, and to inspire young artists to create sculptures of their own.-Anne Knickerbocker, Cedar Brook Elementary School, Houston, TX Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

ALA Booklist (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)

Devious oranges, shy radishes, a socially outcast leek? All roll across the colorful pages of this novelty book. With expertly cut mouths and seed eyes, a variety of produce shows a roller coaster of emotional states--happiness, shyness, love, jealousy, embarrassment--as rhyming text asks children about feelings: When you're angry, do you pout? Whine? Cry? Scream? Shout? Kids will find the inherent silliness irresistible and be drawn in by the book's visual appeal: the colors are strong, the photography is excellent, and the expressions, derived from the natural lumps and bumps of the fruits and vegetables (enhanced by a few incisions), are surprisingly masterful. Adults may use this as a starting point for discussing feelings with the very young. But most likely, kids will flip through the pages for quick, easy laughs. (Reviewed February 1, 2000)

Horn Book (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)

Food artists Freymann and Elffers unleash the latent personalities of fruits and vegetables by carving faces on them, then using their expressive produce to illustrate different emotions. Paired with a catchy, minimal rhyming text, their flashy color photographs of jealous tomatoes, angry oranges, proud bell peppers, and the like add zest to the standard concept book theme.

Kirkus Reviews (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)

Going produce shopping with Freymann and Elffers is more of a casting call than a trip to the supermarket, for they use fruits and vegetables to display a wide range of emotions. Children and their keepers will be astonished to discover how closely the wrinkles, bends, and creases in produce can mimic human feelings. The text is fairly direct, asking questions to make children think about their emotions: "When you're angry, do you pout? Whine? Cry? Scream? Shout?" The ridges of a red pepper, with eyes of dried peas, convey the pout, while other fruit demonstrate the rest of the query. These full-color photographs communicate most of the information; even preschoolers will be able to tell a happy orange from a glum one, and adults will smile to see an onion crying. The organic qualities of the produce are used to charming advantage, e.g., the bend of a green pepper makes the perfect overbearing profile of a bully, while a hollowed-out orange gives just the right depth to an opened-mouthed howl. Fun, and useful—what child would not be encouraged to talk about being shy when there is a cantaloupe that admits to exactly the same thing? (Picture book. 4-9)

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

"Photos of scowling oranges and gregarious scallions garnish this garden of delights from the creators of Play with Your Food," wrote <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">PW. "The recipe is simple and successful." All ages. <EMPHASIS TYPE=""ITALIC"">(June)

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
School Library Journal Starred Review (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)
ALA Booklist (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)
Horn Book (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)
Kirkus Reviews (Mon Feb 06 00:00:00 CST 2023)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Wilson's Children's Catalog
Reading Level: 2.0
Interest Level: P-2
Reading Counts!: reading level:1.3 / points:1.0 / quiz:Q21177
Lexile: 370L
Guided Reading Level: M
Fountas & Pinnell: M

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Category: Feelings"Amused? Confused? Frustrated? Surprised? Try these feelings on for size."This is a book that asks all the right questions. And leaves you feeling great no matter what the answers are!"Who'd have dreamed that produce could be so expressive, so charming, so lively and so funny?...Freymann and...Elffers have created sweet and feisty little beings with feelings, passions, fears and an emotional range that is, well, organic."-The New York Times Book Review


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