Let's pop, pop, popcorn!

Cynthia Schumerth

Book - 2021

"Told through rhyme, the step-by-step process of how America's favorite snack is grown, harvested, and popped is explained. Back matter includes scientific facts and activities"--

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Subjects
Genres
Instructional and educational works
Picture books
Stories in rhyme
Published
Ann Arbor : Sleeping Bear Press [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Cynthia Schumerth (author)
Other Authors
Mary Uhles, 1972- (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
Audience
Ages 4-8
ISBN
9781534110427
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In energetic rhymes and onomatopoeic text, debut author Schumerth details popcorn's journey from seed to snack. As the pages turn, an inclusive group of children prepare the soil and tend the sprouts ("Dig the ground up with a hoe./ Plant the seeds and hope they grow"); watch for growing stalks ("Ears sprout hair that's fuzzy red"); harvest, shuck, and dry ears of corn; and at last pop the resultant kernels into their final delicious form. Vibrant unlined illustrations by Uhles make use of textural close-ups to show the children invested at every stage of the plant's journey; one spread includes a kid's-eye view of weeding. Though a smattering of scientific words sometimes slows the text's otherwise steady rhythm ("Not strong enough to hold this load.../ The shells (called pericarps) explode"), Schumerth and Uhles offer a lively introduction to the science behind a favorite munchable. Back matter includes more information about why popcorn pops, along with a popcorn-related science project and craft. Ages 6--7. (Mar.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

K-Gr 2--Popcorn is often one of life's great mysteries when you are very young. This book helps kids understand where popcorn comes from and how it explodes into being, all the way from planting seeds to enjoying a bowlful. The rhyming text is short and harder words (e.g., pericarps) are featured in bold and explained, and are included in the back matter as well. The illustrations feature an inclusive group of young children learning to make popcorn. The drawings are colorful and usually include fun perspective shots of the children and the popcorn. This book also includes activities in the back. These activities include growing your own popcorn and creating your own "popcorn sheep." The back matter also features a page that goes a little more in-depth scientifically on how popcorn is made, with photos of an actual kernel of popcorn in stages of popping. VERDICT A perfect book to expand nonfiction story times.--Kristin Joy Anderson, Lewis Univ., Romeoville, IL

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A spirited rhyming ode to popcorn and the fun it brings to all. This book can be divided into two parts. The first half follows a group of children as they learn to grow popcorn plants. A freckle-faced White kid works with a hoe as a brown-haired child with beige skin drops seeds into the ground. The whole diverse group marvels as the sprouts emerge and quickly grow up past their heads. They harvest and dry the cobs and remove the kernels with a "plink, plunk, plink." The kernels land in the pot, the text maintaining its rhyme scheme as it covers the anatomy of a kernel and why it pops. While this scientific interlude rhymes germ with endosperm, the syncopation through these pages is clumsy and forced. Luckily, when the popcorn starts popping, the energy and fun and meter return. While each line of text rarely strays from seven or eight syllables, there is great synergy between words and pictures, making it hard to sit still while turning the pages. Representing a wide variety of skin tones and hair textures, the children all display an engaged and curious demeanor. Their teacher, a Black woman, provides adult supervision of the cooking. Endnotes provide a summary on the types of corn, the parts of a kernel, and why popcorn pops, with a few popcorn-related activities. Fun: a highly disguised STEM book for snack lovers. (Informational picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.