This is not my lunch box!

Jennifer Dupuis

Book - 2024

"Join in on a surprising camping trip and discover the favorite meals of your favorite forest creatures--from the wood frog to the moose. Rich art illustrates the beautiful biodiversity found in our forests and expressive, repetitive text helps even the youngest naturalists learn all about herbivores, omnivores, and carnivores"--

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

What do animals eat? Find out! In a lush green woodland, a light-skinned child sets up a tent and hungrily opens a red lunchbox. Aaargh! It's crawling with insects and spiders! "No thank you! I will NOT eat that! This is not my lunch box. This lunch box belongs to the…" A page turn reveals the answer: "downy woodpecker." Over the course of the book, the child opens more differently colored lunchboxes to reveal the food preferences of a jumping mouse, black bear, praying mantis, moose, wood frog, red fox, American robin, skunk, lightning bug, and white-tailed deer. Each time, the same refrain appears. The contents are alliterative: "gnarly nuts, wiggling worms, tangy truffles"; "a fuzzy fly, an angry aphid, a meaty moth." There's no soft-pedaling some predators' diets: Skunks do eat furry moles, and foxes do consume the little cousins of the cute mouse featured earlier. The child turns down many items that humans typically eat: strawberries, eggs, fish, and corn. But Schwartz's precise, radiant, richly colored illustrations make even mealworms and larvae look tasty. On the final double-page spread, the child (whose own rainbow-hued lunchbox holds fruit, a cucumber, yogurt, and crackers) is one of a dozen diverse kids holding colorful lunchboxes, with most of the featured animals peeking from the trees behind them. A clever and lovely introduction to animal diets. (animal matching game) (Informational picture book. 4-8) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.