Beetle McGrady Eats Bugs! Review

Beetle McGrady Eats Bugs
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Although young Beetle McGrady yearns for the adventure and fame achieved by Amelia Earhart, Laura Ingalls Wilder, and Marco Polo, all she gets is a dare to eat an ant during "Fun with Food Week."She decides that eating insects is pretty mundane, especially when she just can't get one past her mouth.All this changes when Chef Suzanne, the Paul Prudhomme of insect cuisine, comes to school with such delights as toasted cricket, Chinese chop-suey ants, grasshopper tacos, and Mexican stinkbug salsa! In a truly gross-out scene, Beetle is shown with a cricket leg sticking out of her mouth, with another speared cricket on the way. Beetle's adventuresome spirit (and hardcore stomach) earns her the pioneer status that she craved.

Jane Manning's prose captures the free-flowing rhythms of the school day, and the kids' talk is realistic, including both good-natured teasing and supportive reassurance.The story is on the frenetic side, especially with the arrival of the zany chef Suzanne, and there's a madcap tangle of bugs and kids after her arrival.The writing is generally fun to read:

"She closed her eyes. She, Beetle McGrady, set the itchy-twitchy, buggly-wuggly ant on the tip of her tongue. The ant was tickly. The ant was creepy. The ant was crawly.If she ate the ant, she would be a real explorer. A true pioneer. Beetle A-for-Anteater McGrady!"

McDonald also includes some fun-with-food humor. Roger calls falafel "Awful-awful," Lacey claims that succotash gives you a rash, and, in a statement so precise and egocentric that it rings especially true, Mona complains that "Fish eggs smell like caviar."

Jane Manning `s exaggerated drawings of Suzanne and the fleshy, big-faced kids have a "Mad Magazine" look, and she spares little in her depictions of cooked bugs. Still, the book is not entirely consistent.Beetle's fun tips on eating bugs("Can't eat a mealworm? Close your eyes and pretend it's spaghetti--slurp!") contrast with pictures of smiling bugs holding anti-bug eating protest signs. Only those who like a fairly high gross-out factor will enjoy viewing the insect dishes and McGrady's eating. Moreover, while this is a silly, obviously far-fetched yarn, the repeated connection between bug eating and self-esteem is a reach.Still, there is an audience for juvenile culinary adventures--just try to make sure you know yours before sampling this one!

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Product Description:

BEETLE MCGRADY EATS BUGS Megan McDonald The debut of an exuberant new picture book character from the best–selling author of the Judy Moody series. Beetle McGrady dreams of being an explorer like Marco Polo or a pioneer like Amelia Earhart. She dreams of being brave and daring, and she will begin by ... eating an ant. It's dare double dare on the school playground, but will Beetle be able to live up to her dreams? Face to face –– or Beetle to ant –– will she be able to bite and chew and ... swallow? Gulp! If she does, what will the ant taste like? If she does, will the ant be crunchy or squishy? And if she can't, does that mean she's a chicken?



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