FICTION

The Bear Ate Your Sandwich

illus. by Julie Sarcone-Roach. 40p. Knopf. Jan. 2015. Tr $16.99. ISBN 9780375858604; lib. ed. $19.99. ISBN 9780375958601; ebk. $10.99. ISBN 9780307982421.
COPY ISBN
RedReviewStarPreS-Gr 2—"It all started with the bear," begins this story of what happened to a sandwich. Bear wakes up to the delectable aroma of freshly picked berries. He sniffs out a red truck, the back of which is filled with boxes of perfectly harvested berries. After having a berry party, Bear falls asleep. The truck drives him to a new forest—the city. When Bear begins to explore, he sees things in the city framed by his own experiences: a telephone pole becomes a tree, and bricks on the side of a building make great bark for scratching. In a park, he finds a lunchbox with a delicious sandwich, which he eats ravenously. When he climbs a tree, he can see his forest home in the distance and desperately wants to return. Somehow, he finds a boat, which carries him to the familiar sights and sounds of home. "So that's what happened to [the] sandwich." This is a fun story that children will enjoy, though they'll need to suspend logic a bit. The illustrations in this book are terrific: color-drenched and bold slashes that cover the pages. The funny Bear is sympathetic and is only doing what bears do—eating and sleeping. And making us laugh. This book is a fine addition to any collection.—Mary Hazelton, formerly at Warren & Waldoboro Elementary Schools, ME
An offstage narrator spins this entertaining tale about a missing sandwich's fate: it involves a hungry bear, a berry-eating binge, a nap in the back of a pickup truck, and an unexpected road trip to the city. The diverting story and vibrant, impressionistic paintings help keep the narrator's identity--and reliability--a surprise until the truth is unleashed ("Ruff! Ruff!").
"By now I think you know what happened to your sandwich. But you may not know how it happened." An offstage narrator spins this entertaining tale about the fate of a missing sandwich. The narrator's creative version of events begins with a hungry bear, a berry-eating binge, a postprandial nap in the back of a pickup truck, and an unexpected road trip to the big city. All the while, we see words at entertaining odds with the pictures: those "high cliffs" the bear notices are the skyscrapers in the big-city landscape to which the truck has inadvertently transported him. Sarcone-Roach uses a vibrant color palette in her impressionistic paintings, gleefully depicting the bear exploring unfamiliar terrain. To her credit, the question of the narrator's identity -- and reliability -- may not come up for readers until book's end. If they do wonder, the diverting story and illustrations help to keep it a surprise. After the bear returns to the forest, the silver-tongued narrator's subterfuge quickly falls apart, and the truth is unleashed ("Ruff! Ruff! Ruff! Ruff! Ruff!"). The book stands up to repeat readings; the illustrations (and endpapers) beg for more attention. kitty flynn

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