Ziggy's Big Idea
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
March 3, 2014
Long and Joni posit a new origin story for the ubiquitous bagel (the existing legends are noted on the book's final page). It all started in the shetl, they say, where a wildly inventive boy named Ziggy wants to solve the plight of Moishe the baker, whose "top secret boiled buns" (which are "boiled then baked, making them soft and fluffy inside, and gold and crunchy on the outside") have a serious design flaw: "Mrs. Schwartz complains the buns are undercooked at the center." Ziggy's innovation: don't think bun, think bracelet. With an empty hole at the center, there's nothing to undercook, and even the finicky Mrs. Schwartz is impressed with the result. It's solid storytelling, and Joni's earth-toned drawings are a pleasing mix of flattened perspectives, dimensionality, and texture. There's a good joke about another one of Ziggy's inventions ("shulstilts," to help a short rabbi "see eye to eye with the bar mitzvah boys!"), but the overall approach is earnest and affirming. Ages 5â9.
March 1, 2014
A young boy contributes to shtetl life by thinking up new ways to do ordinary things and, in the process, helps a baker perfect his "top secret boiled buns." Many of Ziggy's ideas have good intentions but aren't always practical, like the "shulstilts" he creates for the very short rabbi. Pleased, the rabbi anticipates being taller than the bar mitzvah students and being able to read the Torah with ease--until he falls forward and off the homemade stilts, losing his black hat. Undeterred, Ziggy goes home to think up some new ideas and in the night, dreams up his biggest one yet. He has thought of a way to help the baker bake his special buns so the center isn't always undercooked. Ziggy shows the baker how to create a dough circle instead of a bun to drop into the boiling water before baking. Perfectly puffed and beautifully browned, the new creation is akin to a bracelet and renamed a bagel for the German term. (A concluding note delves into the derivation of the word "bagel.") Illustrations are detailed and charming, utilizing digital collage to limn scenes of a brick-walled bakery in an Eastern European village (though the French-looking mustachio on Moishe, the baker, seems a tad out of place). The story's dialogue-driven, child-oriented approach makes a nifty starting point for this "origin tale" of a much-loved breakfast food. (recipe) (Picture book. 4-6)
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