Free From Apple Trees To Cider, Please! Penned By Felicia Sanzari Chernesky Digital
account of making fresh apple cider, Kids and adults will be charmed by the rhymes and the illustrations depicting the joys of apple picking and making cider.
sitelink com/booksali .stars. illustrations and the colors are wonderful, we had an Apple Tree while I was growing up, So that brought back memories, the last page made me wish I had a tall cold glass of Apple Cider to drink, Follows a family on their visit through an apple orchard, Rhymes.
I guess children's books with rhyme schemes such as this are why modern poets tend to avoid rhyme altogether.
It never really annoyed me until I started reading children's books with regularity for work, Everything else about the book is good, It teaches how to make cider and the art is vivid, It would actually be a good selection for the age group I usually read foryears old, Talk about lack of diversity, Every single person is the same shade of beige, Every single woman and girl is wearing a dress, And only men, not women, are depicted operating machinery or really doing any work at all, Good book for my PreKschool, In rhyme it shows the process of making apple cider, A fun book about going to the cider mill, The illustration style is really neat I loved the way the little girl's hair was done, It did get a little bit busy at times, but as a whole, I still liked the pictures,
As far as text, I feel like the rhyme gave the story less impact, I found myself skimming over it, because that style of rhyme is usually for much, much younger kids, but the story of making cider is for kiddos who are a little bit older.
This is a fiction take on how apples are made into apple cider, The illustrations are colorful and really entertained Cassie a lot, She loved looking at the illustrations in this book and seeing the different things on each page, I loved how they interlinked the truth of apples into apple cider into a small storyline, As not every kid will see how apple ciders are created, I recommend checking this book out for your family, An excellent story to get you in the mood for apple picking! Told in rhyming text format, this story shows children the apples journey from growing on trees until they are made into apple cider.
The illustrations are cute and colourful and go perfectly with the story, From Apple Trees to Cider, Please! follows a little girl and her mother as they go to the apple orchard.
As they journey through the orchard they follow the process of and apple becoming apple cider, It's a wonderful journey filled with a delightfully rhyming text and the colorful illustrations of Julia Patton, This book would be a great read before taking your own children to the apple orchard, or and excellent addition to a teacher's unit on autumn.
It is a pretty fall day and just great for apple picking and making apple cider, The reader follows along with a family as they pick apples straight through to the process of making apple cider.
With rhyming text, it makes a great read aloud story teaching others about the process of apple cider making on a juvenile level.
I would recommend this title for a read aloud for storytime as well as for anyone interested in the basic concept of picking apples and making apple cider.
The story is easy to follow along and the illustrations are colorful and a little quirky and the characters are depicted as happy and carefree.
Fabulous kids book showing how apples can be used, Will have to pick up again later when I have my Cider Days, A great book just in time for fall! The mother and daughter go to the orchard to see the apples grow and learn how cider is made.
Then, surprise! there's an apple festival where they can taste other yummy apple treats, It was sort of a "How it's Made" for preschoolers, Perfect for an apple story time, I was a bit disappointed in sitelinkFrom Apple Trees to Cider, Please!, It's not a bad book by any means but I think it suffered from the rhyme scheme as it didn't allow enough scope for fully explaining the process involved in making cider when it came to the machinery aspect.
It was challenging for text and illustrations to fully represent, for example, how the apples are squeezed to make the juice come out.
The illustrations, while conveying all of the fun and colorful activities at an apple orchard open for the season, were a bit busy and cartoonish for my taste.
That said, my son seemed to enjoy it and asked for several readings, An interesting book about making cider from picking apples to pushing them through an apple press, A bit advanced for Elliot in some parts, so I summarized a few pages, but overall he enjoyed it, especially since we drank cider while we read!
read at ageThe story was soso, but the illustrations were phenomenal! So bright and colorful and cheery.
Who knew what it took to make apple cider This book will walk children through the apple cider making process from the orchard to the enjoying a cool glass of cider and everything in between.
Any thing about apples is HUGE at my library in the fall so we added this one, It's not my favorite but solid, Interesting book with alright illustrations, I'm not sure if the little girl's name is Apple or what because it doesn't mention anyone's name in the whole book until the very end where it says, "Apple smiles".
Okay, but who is Apple! The little girl The mom The other little girl Very unclear, but I'm assuming it's the little girl since we hear "Mom" throughout the story.
If that is indeed someone's name, it should be mentioned WAY earlier and more than once instead of just once at the end.
It's cool that it rhymes a bit throughout the book, but that unclear Apple name really upset me, Also, my friend just pointed out that why the sudden switch from first person to third person at the end Throughout the whole book it's from the little girl's perspective and then at the end, it switches to third Why What is the purpose of this Awful ending.
If Apple is the
name of the little girl, it should have started with, "Hi, I'm Apple", or "Hi, My name is Apple" so we know at the beginning that that is in fact her name.
A fun little book. Awesome simple rhymes. We get to go through the process of making apple cider at an orchard, Really enjoy reading this with my kids every season, We always read it before visiting the orchard and this year was no different, I found that my oldest was more interested in the process this year and more engaged in the illustrations, He even asked to see a video on the cider making process, We've been reading this since the fall after several trips to the pumpkin farm, Cute story of the process of making apple cider and featuring many things you can find at an apple orchard/farm.
No idea why this isn't hitting me the way it should be, because it's perfect on paper for fall storytime.
Grab the wagon, it's a bright autumn day and the trees are full of ripe, red apples! There's an apple festival underway at the farm and lots of work to do making cider.
This visit finishes with a cider doughnut and a cup of freshly pressed cider, DELICIOUS! Told in crisp, actiondriven rhymes from a young child's point of view, From Apple Trees to Cider, Please! is a realistic account of how apple cider is pressed, flavored with the charm and vigor of a harvest celebration.
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