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When Ruby Tried to Grow Candy
by Valorie Fisher
Available from Powells Used Books
$11.50
on 8-31-2008
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Features
ISBN Number: 9780375840159 Author: Fisher, Valorie Publisher: Schwartz & Wade Books Subject: Humorous Stories Subject: Gardening Subject: Candy Subject: Nature & the Natural World, Gardening Subject: Science Fiction, Fantasy, & Magic Publication Date: January 2008 Cover Type: Hardcover Written in: English Illustrations: YES Number of Pages: 40 Book Size: 11.60x8.88x.41 in. 1.02 lbs. Children's Book Type: Picture / Wordless Age Level: 04-08
Ruby Louise Hawthorne can't believe her eyes. Right there, in Miss Wysterious's garden, teacups are growing on trees, shoes are sprouting like weeds, and eggbeaters are jangling from branches. So maybe Ruby should listen when Miss Wysterious tells her all the important rules of gardening-like watering and weeding and labeling what you plant. That way, when Ruby plants her jellybeans, they really just might grow. . . . Anyone with even the slightest sweet tooth is sure to rejoice along with Ruby when her candy finally sprouts! And it's all depicted in Fisher's mixedmedia illustrations that include real candy! Review: "When Ruby retrieves her ball from an eccentric neighbor's yard, she meets the blustery Miss Wysterious, who barks such expletives as 'Jumping jelly beans!' and 'Blazing butterscotch!' With Mary Poppins snappishness, the mysterious Wysterious hands Ruby some jelly beans and instructs her to plant them, over the course of some weeks dishing out gardening advice: 'Buttons must be picked early, unless you need them the size of frying pans! And remember, with shoes always plant a pair.' In fact, a tree in the woman's yard drips with buttons, another with all-left shoes, etc. Even more fantastical than the plot, Fisher's (Ellsworth's Extraordinary Electric Ears) mixed-media art belongs to the love-it-or-hate-it genus. Flat, cut-paper images — of the cartooned characters, highly patterned foliage, trees and more, all rendered in different styles — stand up within intricately composed sets, amid three-dimensional candies, miniature gardening tools and other props. The complexity of each assemblage commands admiration. However, not everything emerges successfully from this mlange: background images blur, sometimes almost past recognition. The alternate universe Ruby discovers is hazily developed also. To Ruby's surprised delight, peppermints and gumdrops blossom forth. What can readers take away? Gather ye peppermint rosebuds? Blossom wherever you're planted? Or, as Miss Wysterious says, 'If you're in doubt, nothing will sprout' — in other words, believe and magical things will happen, a nebulous and familiar message that gets a literal interpretation here. Ages 4-8." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.)
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