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Bread is for
                                    Eating

BREAD
IS FOR
EATING


co-author, Phillis Gershator

illustrated by Emma Shaw-Smith

Holt, 1995


*Reading Rainbow Featured Selection, PBS
*Trumpet Book Club
* Notable Trade Book, Field of Social Studies
* Children's Catalog, 2001
* Recommended Literature, California Dept. of Education, 2002

From the book jacket:

Think of the seed, asleep in the ground.

Think of the earth, a dark, cozy bed.

    All around the world, people eat bread--from tortillas and baguettes to pitas, challah, and sliced white. Here is a book for very young children that celebrates bread--and everyone who works so hard to make it--from seed to supermarket. Readers will enjoy singing the refrain and will learn Spanish words, too!

     The rhythmic, bilingual text is complemented by rich, vibrant paintings, reminiscent of Guatamalan folk art, that depict a variety of peoples and breads.

A little about the book:

Says Phillis--

     I adore books about "process." When I heard a Spanish song about bread performed on TV one night, I was inspired, and with my husband David, a poet, songwriter, and former Spanish teacher, wrote a story about bread, beginning with a grain of wheat. David wrote a new song, too, in English and Spanish, which is included in the book.

Says David--

     Anything that involves bread is evocative. Bread resonates. And this book is beautifully illustrated--highly edible!

From the reviews:


"Glowing with wheaten tones of gold, the folk-art style illustrations show the mother and son in their cozy Latin American farmhouse, as well as the cycle that brings bread to tables all over the world. Use as a multicultural, musical lead-in to Russell Hoban's Bread and Jam for Frances, followed by Dr. Seuss' Green Eggs and Ham, for a story hour lineup guaranteed to make mouths water and tummies rumble." Booklist

Spanish and English are blended seamlessly with the graceful narrative. Shaw-Smith's heroic-style pictures, filled with rich, glowing reds and yellows, are crammed with...details....Scenes are packed in the way of gigantic Mexican murals. Endpapers are a patchwork quilt of tiny vignettes....These images, vibrating with life and color, are not to be missed." School Library Journal