by Her Majesty Queen Rania of Jordan Al Abdullah (Author) Tricia Tusa (Illustrator)
WorldCat is the world's largest library catalog, helping you find library materials online.
In her author's note, Jordanian royal Al Abdullah explains that an incident from her childhood inspired this story about best friends who do everything together at school, including eat lunch. Lily's choice of sandwich is peanut butter and jelly while Salma's is hummus on pita, and each girl thinks the other's fare is weird or gross. When Lily finally vocalizes her opinion, the two exchange heated words, leading schoolmates to take sides and toss out nastier insults (You look funny! You "dress" dumb!), eventually escalating into a messy, cafeteria-wide food fight. Message trumps realism: the speed with which the girls make peace after sampling one another's sandwiches is as unlikely as the food fight itself. A foldout spread amplifies the readily apparent themes of acceptance and sharing, as the girls and their classmates enjoy a buffet of international foods. Featuring pastel hues, Tusa's ("Fred Stays with Me!") wispy mixed-media artwork assuredly depicts the bond between the protagonists and adds dollops of humor such as the food that gets wedged into the stern lunch lady's bouffant to this well-intentioned if predictable story. Ages 3-7 (Apr.)
Copyright 2010 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission
K-Gr 2 The day Lily stops eating her peanut butter and jelly sandwich to tell Salma her hummus and pita sandwich looks yucky and vice versa is the day they stop being friends. Their collaborative art projects end. They no longer play on the swings or jump rope together, and, at lunch time, they sit at different tables. As their story spreads across the school, so does intolerance. Students begin choosing sides in the cafeteria and calling each other "Jelly heads" and "Chickpea brains." When the two girls get caught in the middle of a food fight and called to the principal's office, they decide it's time to make some changes. The first is accomplished over their sandwich lunch; the second, over a multicultural smorgasbord, the latter depicted on a foldout of an enormous table laden with dishes and flags. Soft watercolor cartoon illustrations portray a lively student body and a slightly forbidding principal. This engaging title reminds children that having the courage to try new things can result in positive experiences. - Tanya Boudreau, Cold Lake Public Library, AB, Canada
Copyright 2010 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission