Fresh-Picked Poetry: A Day at the Farmers' Market

Author:   Michelle Schaub ,  Amy Huntington
Publisher:   Charlesbridge Publishing,U.S.
ISBN:  

9781580895477


Pages:   32
Publication Date:   14 March 2017
Recommended Age:   From 4 to 8 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Fresh-Picked Poetry: A Day at the Farmers' Market


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Overview

A poetic introduction to urban farmers' markets. This collection of poems takes young readers to a day at an urban farmers' market. Who to see, what to eat, and how produce is grown-it's all so exciting, fresh, and delicious. Readers are invited to peruse the stands and inspect vendors' wares with poems like ""Farmer Greg's Free-Range Eggs,"" ""Summer Checklist,"" and ""Necessary Mess."" Bright and vibrant, this is the perfect guide for little ones to take with them on marketing day to inspire literacy and healthy eating. A pleasing window into the world of the farmers' market - School Library Journal, starred review Sprightly illustrations and engaging rhymes will leave readers eager to sample market bounty - Kirkus Reviews This cheerful collection of verse offers an enticing introduction to farmers' markets - Booklist

Full Product Details

Author:   Michelle Schaub ,  Amy Huntington
Publisher:   Charlesbridge Publishing,U.S.
Imprint:   Charlesbridge Publishing,U.S.
Dimensions:   Width: 21.30cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 26.70cm
Weight:   0.391kg
ISBN:  

9781580895477


ISBN 10:   1580895476
Pages:   32
Publication Date:   14 March 2017
Recommended Age:   From 4 to 8 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Creating a casual, summery vibe, this attractive book presents a chronological series of short poems describing a farmers' market. Before dawn, farmers load their trucks and drive toward town. At daybreak, they set up their tents and tables. Soon the market buzzes with people talking and dogs chasing around the stands. Besides the usual produce, shoppers find honey, eggs, baked goods, a knife sharpener, a face painter, and dress-up costumes for kids. Schaub handles rhythm and rhyme with a light, sure touch. Individual poems feature topics such as the selling of sweet corn, the music of fiddle and banjo, and theneed for dirt. Created with watercolor, graphite, ink, and digital elements, the illustrations suggest the happy chaos of a busy marketplace in a racially diverse community. Recurring characters, both people and dogs, can be found in many scenes as they observe and interact with one another. As fully illustrated as a picture book, this cheerful collection of verse offers an enticing introduction to farmers' markets.--<i>Booklist In her first picture book, poet Schaub celebrates farmers' markets in 18 buoyant, mostly rhymed poems; readers can follow two children and their respective dogs through one such market in Huntington's (Grandma Drove the Lobsterboat) airy watercolors. The poems sing praises of the edibles on sale at the market, as well its sights and entertainment. Get your roasted sweet corn here!/can't beat this time-of-year! reads Sally's Sweet Corn, while Delightful Bites highlights the market's delicious smells: Alluring aromas float over tent-tops--a whiff of vanilla, a whisper of spice. Occasional moments of excitement (one of the dogs makes a beeline for a table of free fruit samples) capture the bustling energy of an outdoor market.--<i>Publishers Weekly</i>


A multiethnic crowd of people saunter through a farmers' market, investigating produce, accompanied by cheerful poetry. Does the smell of a melon give clues you can use ? Are free-range eggs truly eggs-traordinary, and is honey really liquid-gold alchemy ? Along with this delectable sampling of sweet corn and the search for gooseberries are a list of reasons to shop at such a market, from Tempting Your Taste Buds to Befriending a Farmer. Huntington's light watercolor brushstrokes provide a pleasing window into the world of the farmers' market, from the early morning unloading of the truck to packing up in the late afternoon. Pair this delightful visit with Grace Lin's mix of science and haiku in Our Food: A Healthy Serving of Science and Poems and Gail Gibbons's exuberant The Vegetables We Eat for a nicely balanced diet. VERDICT When a line wraps around the corner for fresh-squeezed lemonade and the farmers mist the Swiss chard and themselves, you know you're in the right place. Yes! -School Library Journal, starred review Creating a casual, summery vibe, this attractive book presents a chronological series of short poems describing a farmers' market. Before dawn, farmers load their trucks and drive toward town. At daybreak, they set up their tents and tables. Soon the market buzzes with people talking and dogs chasing around the stands. Besides the usual produce, shoppers find honey, eggs, baked goods, a knife sharpener, a face painter, and dress-up costumes for kids. Schaub handles rhythm and rhyme with a light, sure touch. Individual poems feature topics such as the selling of sweet corn, the music of fiddle and banjo, and the need for dirt. Created with watercolor, graphite, ink, and digital elements, the illustrations suggest the happy chaos of a busy marketplace in a racially diverse community. Recurring characters, both people and dogs, can be found in many scenes as they observe and interact with one another. As fully illustrated as a picture book, this cheerful collection of verse offers an enticing introduction to farmers' markets. -Booklist In her first picture book, poet Schaub celebrates farmers' markets in 18 buoyant, mostly rhymed poems; readers can follow two children and their respective dogs through one such market in Huntington's (Grandma Drove the Lobsterboat) airy watercolors. The poems sing praises of the edibles on sale at the market, as well its sights and entertainment. Get your roasted sweet corn here!/can't beat this time-of-year! reads Sally's Sweet Corn, while Delightful Bites highlights the market's delicious smells: Alluring aromas float over tent-tops-a whiff of vanilla, a whisper of spice. Occasional moments of excitement (one of the dogs makes a beeline for a table of free fruit samples) capture the bustling energy of an outdoor market. -Publishers Weekly A collection of poems celebrates farmers markets. Beginning with Market Day Today, Schaub encourages readers to spy the wonders / on display where farmers chat and musicians play. In Early Risers, farmers harvest, sort, / wash, and load produce at dawn, and in Transformed, they convert city spaces into tasty transformations. Pile Up describes brown-skinned Farmer Rick meticulously stacking cauliflowers, peppers, beets, and peas in perfect symmetry, while Is It Ripe offers clues on testing cherries, peaches, melons, and apricots. Other poems extol the scrumptious scent of freshly baked goods, the twang and rattle of market music, the ear to ear joy of sweet corn, honey's liquid-gold alchemy, and eggs-traordinary free-range eggs. Empty produce crates and brimming cupboards offer closure in Day's End. Humorous, detail-rich, fresh-toned water-color, graphite, ink, and Photoshop illustrations introduce a brown-skinned farm boy, a white city girl, and their respective dogs, who provide a diverting visual subtext as they explore the market while chasing their rambunctious pets across double-page spreads. Fresh-Picked Reasons to Spend a Day at the Market offers useful data on farmers markets. Sprightly illustrations and engaging rhymes will leave readers eager to sample market bounty. -Kirkus Reviews


A multiethnic crowd of people saunter through a farmers' market, investigating produce, accompanied by cheerful poetry. Does the smell of a melon give clues you can use ? Are free-range eggs truly eggs-traordinary, and is honey really liquid-gold alchemy ? Along with this delectable sampling of sweet corn and the search for gooseberries are a list of reasons to shop at such a market, from Tempting Your Taste Buds to Befriending a Farmer. Huntington's light watercolor brushstrokes provide a pleasing window into the world of the farmers' market, from the early morning unloading of the truck to packing up in the late afternoon. Pair this delightful visit with Grace Lin's mix of science and haiku in Our Food: A Healthy Serving of Science and Poems and Gail Gibbons's exuberant The Vegetables We Eat for a nicely balanced diet. VERDICT When a line wraps around the corner for fresh-squeezed lemonade and the farmers mist the Swiss chard and themselves, you know you're in the right place. Yes! --School Library Journal, starred review Creating a casual, summery vibe, this attractive book presents a chronological series of short poems describing a farmers' market. Before dawn, farmers load their trucks and drive toward town. At daybreak, they set up their tents and tables. Soon the market buzzes with people talking and dogs chasing around the stands. Besides the usual produce, shoppers find honey, eggs, baked goods, a knife sharpener, a face painter, and dress-up costumes for kids. Schaub handles rhythm and rhyme with a light, sure touch. Individual poems feature topics such as the selling of sweet corn, the music of fiddle and banjo, and the need for dirt. Created with watercolor, graphite, ink, and digital elements, the illustrations suggest the happy chaos of a busy marketplace in a racially diverse community. Recurring characters, both people and dogs, can be found in many scenes as they observe and interact with one another. As fully illustrated as a picture book, this cheerful collection of verse offers an enticing introduction to farmers' markets. --Booklist In her first picture book, poet Schaub celebrates farmers' markets in 18 buoyant, mostly rhymed poems; readers can follow two children and their respective dogs through one such market in Huntington's (Grandma Drove the Lobsterboat) airy watercolors. The poems sing praises of the edibles on sale at the market, as well its sights and entertainment. Get your roasted sweet corn here!/can't beat this time-of-year! reads Sally's Sweet Corn, while Delightful Bites highlights the market's delicious smells: Alluring aromas float over tent-tops--a whiff of vanilla, a whisper of spice. Occasional moments of excitement (one of the dogs makes a beeline for a table of free fruit samples) capture the bustling energy of an outdoor market. --Publishers Weekly A collection of poems celebrates farmers markets. Beginning with Market Day Today, Schaub encourages readers to spy the wonders / on display where farmers chat and musicians play. In Early Risers, farmers harvest, sort, / wash, and load produce at dawn, and in Transformed, they convert city spaces into tasty transformations. Pile Up describes brown-skinned Farmer Rick meticulously stacking cauliflowers, peppers, beets, and peas in perfect symmetry, while Is It Ripe offers clues on testing cherries, peaches, melons, and apricots. Other poems extol the scrumptious scent of freshly baked goods, the twang and rattle of market music, the ear to ear joy of sweet corn, honey's liquid-gold alchemy, and eggs-traordinary free-range eggs. Empty produce crates and brimming cupboards offer closure in Day's End. Humorous, detail-rich, fresh-toned water-color, graphite, ink, and Photoshop illustrations introduce a brown-skinned farm boy, a white city girl, and their respective dogs, who provide a diverting visual subtext as they explore the market while chasing their rambunctious pets across double-page spreads. Fresh-Picked Reasons to Spend a Day at the Market offers useful data on farmers markets. Sprightly illustrations and engaging rhymes will leave readers eager to sample market bounty. --Kirkus Reviews


A multiethnic crowd of people saunter through a farmers' market, investigating produce, accompanied by cheerful poetry. Does the smell of a melon give clues you can use ? Are free-range eggs truly eggs-traordinary, and is honey really liquid-gold alchemy ? Along with this delectable sampling of sweet corn and the search for gooseberries are a list of reasons to shop at such a market, from Tempting Your Taste Buds to Befriending a Farmer. Huntington's light watercolor brushstrokes provide a pleasing window into the world of the farmers' market, from the early morning unloading of the truck to packing up in the late afternoon. Pair this delightful visit with Grace Lin's mix of science and haiku in Our Food: A Healthy Serving of Science and Poems and Gail Gibbons's exuberant The Vegetables We Eat for a nicely balanced diet. VERDICT When a line wraps around the corner for fresh-squeezed lemonade and the farmers mist the Swiss chard and themselves, you know you're in the right place. Yes!--School Library Journal, starred review Creating a casual, summery vibe, this attractive book presents a chronological series of short poems describing a farmers' market. Before dawn, farmers load their trucks and drive toward town. At daybreak, they set up their tents and tables. Soon the market buzzes with people talking and dogs chasing around the stands. Besides the usual produce, shoppers find honey, eggs, baked goods, a knife sharpener, a face painter, and dress-up costumes for kids. Schaub handles rhythm and rhyme with a light, sure touch. Individual poems feature topics such as the selling of sweet corn, the music of fiddle and banjo, and theneed for dirt. Created with watercolor, graphite, ink, and digital elements, the illustrations suggest the happy chaos of a busy marketplace in a racially diverse community. Recurring characters, both people and dogs, can be found in many scenes as they observe and interact with one another. As fully illustrated as a picture book, this cheerful collection of verse offers an enticing introduction to farmers' markets.--Booklist In her first picture book, poet Schaub celebrates farmers' markets in 18 buoyant, mostly rhymed poems; readers can follow two children and their respective dogs through one such market in Huntington's (Grandma Drove the Lobsterboat) airy watercolors. The poems sing praises of the edibles on sale at the market, as well its sights and entertainment. Get your roasted sweet corn here!/can't beat this time-of-year! reads Sally's Sweet Corn, while Delightful Bites highlights the market's delicious smells: Alluring aromas float over tent-tops--a whiff of vanilla, a whisper of spice. Occasional moments of excitement (one of the dogs makes a beeline for a table of free fruit samples) capture the bustling energy of an outdoor market.--Publishers Weekly A collection of poems celebrates farmers markets. Beginning with Market Day Today, Schaub encourages readers to spy the wonders / on display where farmers chat and musicians play. In Early Risers, farmers harvest, sort, / wash, and load produce at dawn, and in Transformed, they convert city spaces into tasty transformations. Pile Up describes brown-skinned Farmer Rick meticulously stacking cauliflowers, peppers, beets, and peas in perfect symmetry, while Is It Ripe offers clues on testing cherries, peaches, melons, and apricots. Other poems extol the scrumptious scent of freshly baked goods, the twang and rattle of market music, the ear to ear joy of sweet corn, honey's liquid-gold alchemy, and eggs-traordinary free-range eggs. Empty produce crates and brimming cupboards offer closure in Day's End. Humorous, detail-rich, fresh-toned water-color, graphite, ink, and Photoshop illustrations introduce a brown-skinned farm boy, a white city girl, and their respective dogs, who provide a diverting visual subtext as they explore the market while chasing their rambunctious pets across double-page spreads. Fresh-Picked Reasons to Spend a Day at the Market offers useful data on farmers markets.Sprightly illustrations and engaging rhymes will leave readers eager to sample market bounty.--Kirkus Reviews


Author Information

Michelle Schaub's poems have appeared in several anthologies and magazines. She is the author of This and That Sports and Vehicles of WWI (Capstone Press). Michelle lives in Downers Grove, Illinois. Amy Huntington illustrated Grandma Drove the Garbage Truck, Grandma Drove the Snowplow, and Grandma Drove the Lobsterboat (Down East Books) among others. Amy lives in Williston, Vermont.

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